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$3 million Medicaid reimbursement bump a ‘lifesaver’ for some assisted living providers

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NJ long term care providers will get a temporary 25% rate increase to help with increased costs during COVID.

 
 

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.

 
 

Gov. Phil Murphy

A temporary 25% Medicaid reimbursement rate bump is being called a “lifesaver” for some assisted living providers, according to New Jersey senior living associations.

“We are very thankful the legislature has recognized that our assisted living buildings have had additional expenses,” Kathy Fiery, Health Care Association of New Jersey vice president of assisted living, told McKnight’s Senior Living. “For our Medicaid buildings, this was a difficult year. This is, at least, an acknowledgement that high-occupancy Medicaid buildings are deserving of some additional dollars.”

Garden State Gov. Phil Murphy signed legislation that makes a fiscal year 2021 supplemental appropriation of $3 million to the Department of Human Services for a temporary 25% increase to assisted living residences and facilities, as well as comprehensive personal care homes, that participate in the Medicaid program. Communities can use the dollars to help increase wages or supplemental pay for certified nurse aides providing direct care, as well as for COVID-19 preparedness and response. 

HCANJ Vice President John Indyk said that assisted living communities had a $3-above-minimum-wage increase go into effect this year, along with other COVID-19-related expenses. The wage increase, he added, was particularly difficult for buildings with high Medicaid populations. Although nursing homes were reimbursed for the increased wage expense, assisted living providers did not receive any financial assistance, Indyk said.

“I think for high Medicaid occupancy facilities in urban areas, they were struggling to pay $3 above the minimum wage. This is much needed relief for them,” he said, adding that additional legislation is being developed to continue the funding into the future.

HCANJ is thankful for the additional funding, Fiery said, adding that except for a few weeks worth of funding for COVID-19 testing, assisted living providers have not received any other financial relief.

LeadingAge New Jersey and Delaware also supported passage of the legislation.

“Many mission-driven assisted living providers who make it a point to serve Medicaid and low-income populations do so at a per-client revenue loss, which is not sustainable,” LeadingAge NJ & DE Vice President Meagan Glaser told McKnight’s Senior Living. “As a result of this new legislation, assisted living residences will now be able to expand, rather than limit, their Medicaid client base.”

Glaser said that assisted living program providers will be able to continue providing services within subsidized senior housing buildings, where residents primarily have low incomes and are Medicaid-eligible. Without this reimbursement increase, she said, many assisted living providers were at risk of closing, which would have forced residents to move into higher-cost nursing homes.

“With the recent closures of several non-profit long-term care facilities, it’s more critical than ever that New Jersey look for ways to ensure the stability and sustainability of mission-driven long-term care providers,” she said. 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.mcknightsseniorliving.com/home/news/3-million-medicaid-reimbursement-bump-a-lifesaver-for-some-assisted-living-providers/

 
 

 
 

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NCDHHS announces Medicaid Managed Care Regional Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans

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The behavioral health managed care contract award winners have been announced.

 
 

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 — The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services today announced the selection of seven organizations to serve as Behavioral Health and Intellectual/Developmental Disability Tailored Plans.

Individuals who need certain services to address a serious mental illness, serious emotional disturbance, severe substance use disorder, intellectual/developmental disability or traumatic brain injury may be eligible to enroll in a Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plan.

Following a competitive selection process, the following organizations were awarded a contract to serve as regional Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans:

  • Alliance Health
  • Eastpointe
  • Partners Health Management
  • Sandhills Center
  • Trillium Health Resources
  • Vaya Health
  • Cardinal Innovations Healthcare*

*While Cardinal Innovation Healthcare was awarded a contract, it is anticipated they will not operate a Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plan at launch due to the consolidation with Vaya Health. 

Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans will provide integrated physical health, behavioral health, long-term care, pharmacy services and will address unmet health-related resource needs for qualifying North Carolinians under one plan. These plans will provide the same services as NC Medicaid Standard Plans with additional specialized services to serve individuals with significant behavioral health conditions, including those utilizing 1915(c) Home and Community-Based Services waivers and those utilizing State Funded Services. 

“NCDHHS looks forward to working with the awardees to make this innovative design a reality for the thousands of North Carolinians who will benefit from a whole person centered, well-coordinated system of care,” said NCDHHS Secretary Mandy K. Cohen, M.D. “Today moves us closer to that goal as we begin to implement this important program design.” 

At launch, Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans will operate regionally, offering robust care management to approximately 200,000 individuals estimated to enroll. An additional unique feature of Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans is the combination of Medicaid and state funding to support enrolled populations. 

The contract award covers counties in each catchment area as of July 26, 2021, as well as realignments approved by Secretary Cohen effective Sept. 1, 2021. Given additional county requests for disengagement, NCDHHS anticipates county alignments for Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans will be significantly different at launch. County realignment and disengagement requests must go through the process identified in law and rule which ultimately require DHHS Secretary’s approval. The list below indicates the anticipated county alignments at go-live. 

“We will work closely with LME/MCO’s to assure a smooth transition to Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans while they continue to oversee the crucial services currently provided through the LME/MCO’s” said Deputy Secretary of NC Medicaid, Dave Richard. 

Only entities operating as LME/MCOs were eligible to apply to become Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans. The first Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans contract term will last four years. The Department has the authority to award no more than seven and no fewer than five regional Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plan contracts and may not award any statewide contracts.

Under Medicaid Managed Care, Standard Plans and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) Tribal Option launched on July 1, 2021, followed by Tailored Plans on July 1, 2022. 

The Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services (DMH/DD/SAS) and Division of Health Benefits (NC Medicaid) will host a webinar today to share information about this important announcement.  

Please register for Joint DMH/DD/SAS and NC Medicaid webinar on July 26, 2021, 2 p.m. ET at: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/640620970643161360.

 After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

For Closed Captioning please login to the event by clicking on the following link at 2 p.m. ET at: https://www.captionedtext.com/client/event.aspx?EventID=4834089&Customer

For information specific to Behavioral Health and I/DD Tailored Plans, please visit the Behavioral Health I/DD Tailored Plans page. 

More information about the transition to NC Medicaid Managed Care can be found on the Medicaid website at medicaid.ncdhhs.gov/transformation.

Projected County Alignments at Tailored Plan Launch for July 1, 2022

This list reflects projected county assignments based on disengagements requested or approved. County realignment and disengagement requests must go through the process identified in law and rule which ultimately require approval by the NCDHHS Secretary. 

  • Alliance Health: Cumberland, Durham, Johnston, Orange, Mecklenburg and Wake. 
  • Eastpointe: Duplin, Edgecombe, Greene, Lenoir, Robeson, Sampson, Scotland, Wayne and Wilson.
  • Partners Health Management: Burke, Cabarrus, Catawba, Cleveland, Davie, Forsyth, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Rutherford, Stanley, Surry, Union and Yadkin.
  • Sandhills Center: Anson, Davidson, Guilford, Harnett, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Randolph, Richmond and Rockingham. 
  • Trillium Health Resources: Bladen, Brunswick, Carteret, Columbus, Nash, New Hanover, Onslow, Pender, Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Craven, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Jones, Martin, Northampton, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell and Washington.
  • Vaya Health: Alamance, Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Caldwell, Caswell, Cherokee, Clay, Franklin, Graham, Granville, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Person, Polk, Rowan, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, Vance, Watauga, Wilkes and Yancey.
  • Pending: Chatham, Halifax, Stokes and Warren. 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.richmondobserver.com/national-news/item/12939-ncdhhs-announces-medicaid-managed-care-regional-behavioral-health-i-dd-tailored-plans.html

 
 

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Aduhelm could be a strain on Medicaid

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A new Alzheimer drug could add 7% to the overall Medicaid spending annual bill (not just drugs).

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

A vial and packaging for the drug Aduhelm. A previously announced investigation into Aduhelm, an expensive and unproven therapy, has sparked scrutiny since winning US approval last month.Associated Press

Biogen’s pricey new Alzheimer’s drug could cost Medicaid anywhere from $720 million to nearly $2.2 billion each year depending on the number of patients treated, according to a new analysis.

Aduhelm, which carries a $56,000 price tag, is generating concern over its potential impact on the overall health care system. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, for instance, is about to begin a process for determining whether Medicare will establish a national coverage policy for the Cambridge biotech’s drug, which is and won regulatory approval last month.

But the path taken toward approval was complicated and controversial, raising concerns about regulatory approval standards and the extent to which patients may actually benefit.

The budget-busting prospects were initially prompted when the Food and Drug Administration approved a so-called broad label, which suggested a large portion of the estimated 6 million Americans who have Alzheimer’s may seek treatment. Earlier this month, though, the FDA narrowed the scope of the label to patients with mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s, the only patients studied by Biogen.

The drug maker believes this will lower the potential patient population to 1 million to 2 million people, most of whom are expected to be Medicare beneficiaries, since the Alzheimer’s population is largely age 65 and over. But if 500,000 people were treated with the medicine, Medicare would spend $29 billion annually, according to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation analysis.

But Medicaid ― which offers health insurance for low-income and disabled people ― is expected to spend much less, since about 67,000 beneficiaries used existing Alzheimer’s drugs, according to a new Kaiser analysis. If 25 percent of these beneficiaries switched to Aduhelm, the total cost would be approximately $720 million, with the states spending $230 million and the federal government covering $490 million.

Yet Medicaid would have to open its wallet further if 75 percent of those same beneficiaries switch to Aduhelm. If that were to happen, the cost to the program would be more than $2.1 billion, which is equal to seven percent of current Medicaid net spending. Under this scenario, states would spend $695 million and the federal share would be $1.47 billion.

Looked at another way, average state and federal spending per enrollee would reach $13,800 and $29,200, respectively. These figures, by the way, reflect mandatory 23.1 percent rebates that drug makers must offer Medicaid, although Kaiser acknowledged that costs may drop if higher rebates are paid or if fewer patients are treated.

For instance, the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, an agency that makes policy recommendations concerning Medicaid, recently proposed increasing minimum rebates for medicines approved under the FDA accelerated approval program Kaiser noted the Congressional Budget office assumed a 10 percent increase. Separately, the CBO found rebates for so-called specialty drugs were 29 percent of retail prices. Kaiser also noted that state Medicaid programs may use criteria to stem usage, which would lower the cost per person.

A recent analysis by the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review said that Aduhelm would only have sufficient value if it were priced between $3,000 and $8,400, which represents an 85 percent to 95 percent discount off the $56,000 list price, due to “insufficient” evidence that the drug benefits patients.

The cost concerns are only one aspect of an intensifying controversy over the drug.

Acting FDA commissioner Janet Woodcock has asked the Office of Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services to open an independent investigation into the recent approval. Some Congressional lawmakers and Public Citizen, the consumer advocacy group, have also called for the HHS OIG to investigate the events leading to the approval.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/07/27/business/aduhelm-could-be-strain-medicaid/

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Fired for comparing a mask reporting policy to Nazism, Medicaid exec sues

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A training director at MA Medicaid has sued the HHS agency over what she claims is wrongful termination of employment.

 
 

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.

 
 

 
 

Masks are displayed in a restaurant window amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Somerville, Massachusetts, U.S., June 19, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

(Reuters) – A former official at the Massachusetts agency that administers Medicaid in the state has filed a lawsuit claiming she was unlawfully fired for comparing mask mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic to Nazi policies in a private Facebook post.

Denise Foley, who was director of internal and external training and communication at MassHealth, filed a complaint in state court on Thursday claiming her January termination violated her free-speech and due-process rights.

Foley in December posted in a private Facebook group that turning in a neighbor for not wearing a face mask “sounds like what the Nazis did in Germany,” among other comments, according to the complaint.

She says that while the post had nothing to do with her job, MassHealth’s then-assistant secretary, Daniel Tsai, told her when she was fired that her comments reflected poorly on the agency because her Facebook profile identified her as a MassHealth employee.

“Public employees do not surrender their constitutional rights when signing up for public service,” Foley’s lawyers, George King and Jim Ambrose, wrote in the complaint.

MassHealth did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The agency hired Foley in late 2019, and her responsibilities included communicating policy and procedural updates to MassHealth employees.

Foley was a member of a private Facebook group for residents of Milton, Massachusetts, which had about 12,000 members, according to Thursday’s complaint. In December 2020, a member of the group posted that he had received a mailing from a local organization encouraging residents to report neighbors who were not wearing face masks in public.

Foley in multiple comments compared the mailing to Nazis urging Germans to turn in Jewish neighbors. She wrote that “calling the authorities on your neighbors for not wearing a mask is the same as calling the authorities to tell them your neighbor is a Jew,” according to the lawsuit.

An anonymous complaint was made to MassHealth, and Foley was fired in late January. According to Foley, Tsai at the time told her that because her job description was listed in her Facebook profile, she was essentially speaking on behalf of the agency.

Tsai said that “in the midst of the pandemic, when it comes to masks, we have to say we don’t have confidence in your ability to be in that role,” according to the complaint.

Foley accused Tsai, MassHealth’s current acting assistant secretary, and other officials of violating her free-speech and due-process rights under the U.S. and Massachusetts constitutions. She also accused MassHealth of wrongful termination in violation of state law.

The case is Foley v. MassHealth, Massachusetts Superior Court, Norfolk County, No. 2182-cv-00678.

For Foley: George King; Jim Ambrose

For MassHealth: Not available

Daniel Wiessner

Dan Wiessner (@danwiessner) reports on labor and employment and immigration law, including litigation and policy making. He can be reached at daniel.wiessner@thomsonreuters.com.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/fired-comparing-mask-reporting-policy-nazism-medicaid-exec-sues-2021-07-23/

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California Is Expanding Medicaid To Undocumented Residents Age 50+

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California will use state only funds to pay for healthcare for 235,000 non-citizens starting in 2022.

 
 

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.

 
 

California is expanding Medicaid eligibility to undocumented residents over age 50, Governor Gavin Newsom announced Tuesday afternoon, with the signing of a bill that he says is the first to offer the program for that age group.

 
 

Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at a news conference in Oakland, Calif., Monday, July 26, 2021. (AP … [+] Photo/Jeff Chiu)

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Key Facts

The law will expand Medi-Cal, the state’s Medicaid program, to about 235,000 low-income undocumented Californians 50 and older, the governor’s office said in a press release.

When the law takes effect in 2022, all low-income Californians without legal status, except those aged 26-49, will be eligible for Medi-Cal, according to the Sacramento Bee.

The state expanded Medi-Cal to children in 2016 and adults up to age 26 in 2020.

Crucial Quote

The Medicaid expansion will “ensure thousands of older undocumented Californians, many of whom have been serving on the front lines of the pandemic, can access critical health care services,” Newsom said in a statement.

Key Background

Under federal law, people who immigrate to the U.S. are eligible for Medicaid—a program for low-income people funded by state and federal dollarsonly if they have legal status and have been in the country for five years. To get around the federal restrictions, eight states and Washington, D.C. have extended Medicaid to undocumented children using state dollars. Children and young adults were the only groups that had been made eligible until 2020, when Illinois expanded Medicaid to undocumented residents over 65.

Big Number

46. That’s the percentage of undocumented immigrants under age 65 who were uninsured in 2019, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. That’s compared to 11.1% of overall U.S. residents who went without insurance in the first half of 2020, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. 

What To Watch For

“There is a lot of momentum at the state level” to expand Medicaid coverage to undocumented children, with several states considering it in the last year, said Kelly Whitener, associate professor at Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute. In Connecticut, legislators have discussed expanding the program to undocumented people at all ages. “It’s a newer trend to chip away at the age range from both sides,” she said.


(Georgetown University Health Policy Institute)

Clipped from: https://www.forbes.com/sites/graisondangor/2021/07/27/california-is-expanding-medicaid-to-undocumented-residents-age-50/?sh=4a338b29b83b

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Florida Medicaid enrollment tops 4.8 million, surpassing forecast growth

 
 

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Florida Medicaid enrollment continues to surge.

 
 

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 State Capitol buildings (Old Capitol in foreground) in Tallahassee, Florida.  

Shutterstock photo

(The Center Square) – Florida’s Medicaid enrollment increased by 1% in June with 48,468 low-income residents qualifying for subsidized health care, according to the state’s Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA).

As of June 30, there were 4,846,412 low-income, elderly and disabled Floridians enrolled in Medicaid, an increase of more than 730,000 since June 2020, AHCA documents in its June enrollment report.

Florida’s economy lost 1.1 million jobs during the peak of the pandemic last spring, hitting a peak unemployment rate of 14.2%.

Medicaid enrollment boosts quickly followed with more than 885,000 qualifying for full coverage between last March and this February, expanding the state’s Medicaid enrollment from 3.9 million to 4.6 million.

Since February, another 250,000 residents have qualified. In December, the Legislature’s Social Services Estimating Conference (SEC) economists forecast 4.588 million Floridians will be enrolled in Medicaid during Fiscal Year 2020 (FY22), which began July 1. That projection has already been eclipsed.

Using an economic forecasting model based on studies of post-pandemic economic recoveries, state economists project it could take 12-15 months to claw back to pre-pandemic employment levels and trim back the state’s Medicaid rolls.

The state’s $100 billion FY22 budget includes about $44 billion in health care spending largely subsidized by federal pandemic assistance, including about $34 billion for Medicaid, up from $31.6 billion the previous year.

June marked the 15th consecutive month in which Medicaid enrollment increased in Florida, the AHCA notes, and also sustained the state’s status as the nation’s leader in enrollment in subsided health insurance plans offered under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

According to the federal Centers for Medicaid & Medicare Services’ (CMS) June Special Enrollment Period Report, 413,409 Floridians enrolled in plans available under the ACA between Feb. 15 and June 30.

Overall, about 2.3 million Floridians have purchased “Obamacare” policies, nearly 20% of the 8.5 million people nationwide who selected or were automatically re-enrolled in HealthCare.gov plans during the extended 2021 open-enrollment period, according to CMS.

After the Trump administration halved the yearly open enrollment period from 12 to six weeks in 2020, President Joe Biden signed an executive order in January authorizing a special enrollment period between Feb. 15 and Aug. 15 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to the CMS, 1.5 million people in 36 states nationwide enrolled in ACA plans between Feb. 15 and June 30. Florida’s 413,409 boost accounted for 27% of that increase.

With average premiums through the ACA marketplace dipping by 25% in April with the adoption of American Rescue Plan tax subsidies, the CMS notes that 34% of new enrollees are paying $10 or less per month after tax credits are taken into account.

“When you make coverage affordable, when you make it easy for people to enroll, they will do so,” CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said. “”The American Rescue Plan has made health coverage more affordable and accessible than ever – and people are signing up.”

In 2014, 983,775 Floridians signed onto the program in its first year. By 2019, 1.9 million Floridians were enrolled.

Florida’s nation-leading ACA insurance exchange enrollment is a product of the state’s growing population of more than 21 million and state lawmakers refusal to expand Medicaid. Florida is one of 12 states that has not done so.

“Let’s be clear – the monthly marketplace numbers show that across the country, there’s a demand for high-quality, low-cost health coverage,” Health & Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said. “Whether through expanded Medicaid or the Health Insurance Marketplace, the ACA is working for millions of Americans – and we’re committed to building on this historic progress.”

Clipped from: https://www.thecentersquare.com/florida/florida-medicaid-enrollment-tops-4-8-million-surpassing-forecast-growth/article_2fc57242-e673-11eb-8fad-e7067aadfda3.html

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Pax­ton Seeks Pre­lim­i­nary Injunc­tion After Biden Admin­is­tra­tion Ille­gal­ly Revoked Med­ic­aid Waiver

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Texas AG has filed a request to stop the Biden administration from un-approving the 1115 DSRIP waiver.

 
 

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.

 
 

Attorney General Ken Paxton sought a preliminary injunction to enjoin the Biden Administration’s illegal action rescinding the extension of the Medicaid Section 1115 waiver negotiated between Texas and the federal government. In a politically motivated move, the administration reversed its agreement to extend that waiver until 2030.   

“In an abuse of power, the Biden Administration blatantly ignored the needs of Texans when it revoked our Medicaid waiver,” Attorney General Paxton said. “Not only does this violate agency regulations, it was clearly intended to force our state into expanding Medicaid under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. This flippant decision is illegal and cruel. Putting the lives of vulnerable Texans on the line for political gain is reprehensible.” 

After taking office, and acting through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Biden Administration purported to revoke that extension, with no warning to Texas. This will cause irreparable harm to Texans. 

Read the motion here.  

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/546740767/pax-ton-seeks-pre-lim-i-nary-injunc-tion-after-biden-admin-is-tra-tion-ille-gal-ly-revoked-med-ic-aid-waiver

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Arkansas submits plan for overhauling Medicaid expansion

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Arkansas’ reworked waiver will not require work to be covered, but will require it to get a managed care plan.

 
 

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.

 
 

Arkansas submitted to the federal government on Tuesday a proposal to overhaul its Medicaid expansion after the program’s previous requirement that some recipients work was blocked by the courts.

The state Department of Human Services turned in its proposed waiver for the expansion program, and officials have said they hope to win approval by November or December.

As with the current program, the overhauled expansion would continue using Medicaid funds to place recipients on private health insurance. It also includes incentives aimed at encouraging participants to work or meet certain health goals.

Arkansas unveiled the proposal after the Biden administration moved to roll back Medicaid work requirements in Arkansas and several other states. A federal judge blocked the Arkansas work requirement.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.modernhealthcare.com/medicaid/arkansas-submits-plan-overhauling-medicaid-expansion

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Fate of Missouri Medicaid expansion in the hands of the state Supreme Court

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The Missouri Supreme Court has heard all arguments and is expected to announce a decision soon.

 
 

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.

 
 

After an eight-year fight over Medicaid expansion, the arguments are over. The question of whether 275,000 people will receive state-paid health care coverage is in the hands of the Missouri Supreme Court.

Oral arguments took place Tuesday in an expedited appeal. The seven judges must decide whether Medicaid eligibility will expand, as directed by the constitutional amendment approved by voters, or, as Cole County Judge Jon Beetem ruled, if it was fatally flawed because it did not include a new source of revenue to pay the anticipated costs.

The court’s only other option, suggested by Attorney General Eric Schmitt’s office in its final written brief, is to leave people eligible for coverage without actually providing it unless lawmakers explicitly fund it.

While there is no deadline for the decision, the expedited schedule indicates the court will rule soon, because coverage was supposed to start July 1.

“What is at stake here is life-saving health care,” Joel Ferber, director of advocacy for Legal Services of Eastern Missouri said to reporters after oral arguments concluded. “Our lead plaintiffs and our clients are desperate for the health care they need.”

In the days and hours leading up to the oral arguments, the judges received plenty of advice on how they should rule. The final written arguments from Schmitt’s office, which wants the court to uphold Beetem, were filed Friday. Friend-of-the-court briefs, along with the final filings from the plaintiffs seeking an order in favor of expansion, were being filed as late as Monday afternoon.

The court, however, heard only from John Sauer, representing the state, and Chuck Hatfield, representing three women who sued when Gov. Mike Parson announced the state would not open enrollment for the expansion group.

Amendment 2, passed last August opened Medicaid eligibility to adults ages 19 to 64 who earn less than 138 percent of the federal poverty guideline. Sauer told the court that while that group is eligible, lawmakers control state spending and did not make room for them in the budget.

“Their intent was not to fund the expansion population and only fund the pre-expansion population,” Sauer said.

Reading the same appropriation bills, Hatfield found a different interpretation. While the spending bills didn’t include the estimated $1.9 billion to cover the expansion population, he said there is money for every service available under Medicaid and there are options to control spending that would provide coverage for everyone eligible.

“The legislature must, of course, follow the priorities the people put in the constitution,” Hatfield said.

The path from passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010, with a requirement that states expand Medicaid coverage, to Tuesday’s arguments, has been dominated by politics, with Democrats and their supporters pushing the state to go along and Republicans just as strongly resisting.

Then-Gov. Jay Nixon first asked lawmakers to expand coverage in 2013, but here was never a realistic chance the Republican-dominated General Assembly would go along.

Passage of Amendment changed some minds, but not enough. Parson, who opposed Amendment 2, put money for the anticipated costs in his January budget proposal. When the final vote on funding came in May in the Missouri Senate, only four Republicans joined 10 Democrats in support of Parson’s request.

Since 1945, the Missouri Constitution has prohibited initiatives that require appropriations if the same ballot measure does not generate the needed revenue. That is why Beetem ruled Amendment 2 is invalid, writing that because it requires the state to spend money, it is unconstitutional.

“How is it you can look back on an election that is past and decide it is invalid?” Judge W. Brent Powell asked Sauer. “How long can you continue to do that?”

“That is not our argument,” Sauer replied.

In his brief for the state, Sauer of the attorney general’s office argued that the judges have only two choices – find that Amendment 2 is valid but subject to appropriation, or that it was not validly enacted.

“This conflict is real, and it stubbornly resists plaintiffs’ belated attempts to explain it away,” Sauer wrote.

Last year, the court decided lawmakers could not use appropriation bills to make Planned Parenthood ineligible to provide Medicaid-paid family planning services. Sauer asked the court to overturn that decision and allow lawmakers to determine which legally eligible people will and will not receive Medicaid coverage.

The judges don’t have to stretch logic that far, Hatfield argued. The three women who initiated the lawsuit are eligible, the legislature appropriated money for every service provided by Medicaid and therefore they cannot be denied, the attorneys wrote.

“This court has consistently held that every doubt, and every ambiguity, should be resolved in favor of upholding the will of the people,” Hatfield said.

The governor has various methods to control spending and though some may be painful, the options are real, Hatfield said Tuesday.

In the brief filed Monday, Hatfield and his co-counsels in the case wrote that the program’s cost, whether for traditional Medicaid or the expansion population, is uncertain every year, they wrote.

First, no one has any idea whether the amount of money the General Assembly appropriated is too much, not enough, or just right, they wrote. “The number of enrollees in the MO HealthNet program fluctuates from year to year, as do the quantity and types of services used.”

The amicus curiae, or friend of the court, briefs have come in from conservative groups, health care providers, backers of Amendment 2 and lawmakers. There’s even a secondary dispute, with Missouri House Democratic Leader Crystal Quade of Springfield and Assistant Democratic Leader Richard Brown of Kansas City asking the court to reject, or at least ignore, the brief filed in the name of the full House.

The stakes are enormous, both for those who would receive coverage and for the state’s treasury.

In the brief for the state’s 12 Federally Qualified Health Care Centers, which serve 600,000 patients, Jim Layton, formerly the state’s top appellate attorney, wrote that it is essential that the clinics serve paying patients to support their work for those without insurance.

Of the people using them, he wrote, 46 percent are on Medicaid already and another 25 percent are without insurance. Many of the uninsured would receive coverage, he wrote, and lawmakers funded all services provided by Medicaid.

“But the General Assembly cannot, merely by changing a dollar figure in a line of an appropriation bill, change a parameter of the program that was constitutionally defined by the people by initiative, any more than it can, by changing a dollar figure or including a proviso in an appropriations bill, change eligibility for any other program,” he wrote.

Before passage of Amendment 2, Missouri was one of 14 states that had not yet expanded Medicaid under the 2010 Affordable Care Act. The law originally made expansion mandatory but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that penalty provisions that made Medicaid an all-or-nothing program were unenforceable.

Under the terms of the ACA, states pay 10 percent of the cost of expansion and the federal government covers 90 percent. In the traditional Medicaid program, Missouri pays about 35 percent of the cost.

Amendment 2 extended coverage to people aged 19 to 65 with household incomes less than 138 percent of the federal poverty guideline, or $17,774 a year for a single person and $36,570 for a household of four.

Under the current Medicaid program, adults without children are not eligible unless they are blind, have another qualifying disability or are pregnant.

The traditional Medicaid program is expected to cost about $12 billion in the current fiscal year.

In his January budget proposal, Parson estimated the total cost of expansion at $1.9 billion, with $130 million from general revenue, $1.65 billion from the federal treasury and the remainder from taxes on medical providers.

If Missouri does expand Medicaid coverage, it will become eligible for additional support for the traditional program estimated to save the state $1.2 billion over two years.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.columbiamissourian.com/news/state_news/fate-of-missouri-medicaid-expansion-in-the-hands-of-the-state-supreme-court/article_96a01070-e5b6-11eb-963d-b7dcec94d387.html

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Senators seek Medicaid-like plan to cover holdout states

MM Curator summary

US Congressmen are introducing a bill to sell Medicaid on the exchanges for free in holdout states.

 
 

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.

 
 

Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., speaks at Alfred E. Beach High School in Savannah, Ga., Thursday, July 8, 2021. Warnock joined fellow Democratic senators Jon Ossoff of Georgia and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin in introducing a bill on Monday, July 12, 2021, to require the federal government to set up a Medicaid-like health plan in states that have not expanded Medicaid plans to cover more low-income adults. (Jim Watson/Pool via AP)

Jim Watsdon

ATLANTA (AP) — Three Democratic U.S. senators from states that have refused to expand Medicaid want the federal government to set up a mirror plan to provide health insurance coverage to people in those states.

Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff of Georgia and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin are introducing the bill Monday, they told The Associated Press. Congressional Democrats are pushing for a coverage expansion in upcoming legislation.

“The single most effective solution to closing our state’s coverage gap is to expand Medicaid,” Warnock said after a June 29 meeting with health care executives. “What we ought to be doing is expanding Medicaid rather than playing games with the health care of Georgia citizens.”

The effort is crucial for Warnock, who seeks reelection in 2022 facing several Republicans eager to defeat him.

People making more than 138% of the federal poverty level are eligible for federal health insurance subsidies through an online marketplace. But as many as 4 million people who make less don’t get assistance in a “coverage gap,” according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act envisioned states would expand Medicaid programs to cover those people, but many conservative states balked. There are 12 holdouts, while an expansion in Missouri mandated by referendum is in limbo after Republican lawmakers refused to pay for it.

Democrats increasingly say leaving people without coverage is unacceptable. They tried to lure remaining states with two years of extra money for expansion, but none budged. Baldwin said such a refusal is “just wrong.”

“Our legislation will open the door to those who have been shut out and expand access to affordable health care, including preventive care, that people want and need,” she said in a statement.

The bill would mandate a new health insurance plan that looks just like Medicaid offered to residents in holdout states. President Joe Biden proposed during his campaign to offer a public option through the federal healthcare marketplace. Democratic Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas and others introduced a bill June 17 to let local governments create local Medicaid expansions.

The Medicaid approach has key advantages, said Jesse Cross-Call, director of state Medicaid strategy with the liberal-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.

The plan would require no premiums and only small copayments, while those costs can be much higher for individuals on the marketplace. People can enroll in Medicaid year-round, while marketplace enrollment is typically only in the fall, or when someone’s circumstances change.

“The idea is for it to be as close to Medicaid coverage as possible,” Cross-Call said.

A new plan could take years to set up, though. Many states use managed care networks to provide Medicaid services, and it’s unclear if the federal government would be able to contract with the groups.

Sponsors say coverage is already paid for because the original Affordable Care Act included money for all 50 states. States normally shoulder 10% of the cost, but the bill would require no state contributions.

The plan also would boost incentives for holdout states to expand on their own. It would raise the federal share of state-federal Medicaid spending by 10 percentage points this coming decade. The current enticement, included in Biden’s coronavirus relief bill, is 5 percentage points for two years. Based on Kaiser Family Foundation estimates, that could be worth a cumulative $160 billion to holdout states and Oklahoma, which launched expansion July 1.

Republicans, Warnock said in June, are effectively “standing between Georgia voters and their tax dollars that are still being paid to cover Medicaid in other states.”

Republicans aren’t backing down. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is pursuing a limited expansion that would impose work or education requirements for benefits. It seeks to add 50,000 Georgia residents in its first two years and require everyone to shop for federally subsidized insurance through private agents. The Biden administration is reevaluating previous approval of the plan by the Trump administration, a reversal Kemp says isn’t allowed.

“The Biden administration has been, in my opinion, trying to throw up roadblocks to our waiver plan that was approved,” Kemp recently told AP. “Senator Warnock can hit me all he wants on Medicaid. What he never mentions is … working on lowering costs for private sector health care. A lot of people don’t want government health care.”

Financial incentives could be required to keep other states from dropping Medicaid expansion to avoid current costs. The bill doesn’t address that.

Warnock spokesperson Meredith Brasher reaffirmed that sponsors want the measure attached to any budget reconciliation measure Democrats use to advance educational and social welfare priorities through the Senate without Republican support.

“Recovery legislation presents a unique, historic opportunity to close the gaps in coverage for the millions of people in the Medicaid coverage gap,” wrote more than 60 members of the Congressional Black, Hispanic and Asian Pacific American caucuses on June 16.

——Clipped from: https://www.pressrepublican.com/news/senators-seek-medicaid-like-plan-to-cover-holdout-states/article_0d7e832b-a349-59d1-a7d3-38a1fa65abdd.html