Understanding Medicaid
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Transcript of Understanding Medicaid
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Understanding Medicaid
N226 Winter 2003Professor: Joanne Spetz29 January 2003
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Medicaid in a nutshell
Insurance for low-income and needy Children Elderly Blind/disabled Receiving federal financial assistance
Federal-State partnership36 million individuals
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History of Medicaid
Introduced in 1965 Same time as Medicare
Originally tied to eligibility for federally funded income support Welfare (AFDC) Disability programs
Expanded in 1980s to more low-income people, especially children
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State control is central
Each state: Establishes its own eligibility
standards Determines the type, amount,
duration, and scope of services Sets the rate of payment for services Administers its own program
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Who is eligible?
Federal gov’t requires coverage of: Families with children qualified for
AFDC Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
Aged, blind, disabled Infants of Medicaid-eligible pregnant
women
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Who is eligible? (continued)
Federal gov’t requires coverage of: Children under age 6 & pregnant
women in households with income <= 133% of poverty level (FPL)
Children under age 19 in families with income at or less than FPL
Recipients of adoption assistance & foster care under Title IV-E of Social Security Act
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Who is eligible? (continued)
Federal gov’t requires coverage of: Certain Medicare beneficiaries Protected groups, such as…
People who lose SSI due to earnings from work
Families who get Medicaid coverage following loss of eligibility due to earnings
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Who is eligible? (continued)
Federal gov’t allows coverage of: Infants & pregnant women up to 185%
of FPL Other low income children Aged, blind, disabled with income
above mandatory coverage level and below FPL
Institutionalized individuals (with specified limits)
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Who is eligible? (continued)
Federal gov’t allows coverage of: Recipients of State supplementary
payments TB infected persons eligible
financially at the SSI level (only for TB care)
Low-income uninsured women diagnosed with breast or cervical cancer
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Who is eligible? (continued)
States can expand eligibility further They pay for other enrollees only with
state funds Undocumented immigrants are an
ongoing debate
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What is “medically needy”?
States can extend Medicaid eligibility to people who have too much income They can spend down to eligibility with
expenses that offsets excess income They can pay premiums to the state for
the difference between family income and income eligibility standard
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What services are covered?
States must offer: Inpatient hospital services Outpatient hospital services Physician services Medical and surgical dental services Nursing facility services for adults Home health care
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What services are covered?
States must offer: Family planning services & supplies Rural health clinic services Lab & x-ray Nurse practitioners, nurse midwives Early and periodic screening,
diagnosis, and treatment services for children (EPSDT)
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What services are covered?
Medically needy program must offer: Prenatal care & delivery services Ambulatory services to those under
age 18 Ambulatory services to those entitled
to institutional services Some other specific things depending
on the groups covered
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What services are covered?
State may offer: Clinic services Nursing facility to children Intermediate care/mentally retarded
services Optometry Prescribed drugs & prosthetics TB services Dental services
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Who provides the care?
Programs must allow freedom of choice of providers HMOs allowed
California’s Medi-Cal has several permutations of Medicaid managed careRecent study finds CA doctors less willing to take Medi-Cal patients
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What payments are made?
Medicaid providers must accept the Medicaid reimbursement as payment in full Payment methods vary across states
For institutional services, payment cannot be more than MedicareDisproportionate share hospitalsHospice care has different payment
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Federal-state cost-sharing
No cap on Federal payment – Feds must match whatever the state providesPortion of Medicaid paid by Feds is determined annually for each state Formula compares state per capita
income with national average Ranges from 50% to 83%
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Do recipients pay?
States may have deductibles, copaysNo payments from patient for: Emergency care Family planning services
No payments from: Pregnant women Children Hospital/nursing home patients Categorically needy HMO enrollees
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Oregon’s controversial plan
Oregon wanted to allocate their Medicaid dollars more effectivelyPrioritized services and procedures Cost-effectiveness analyses Community and professional rankings
Offered coverage for services, according to priority, until money ran out
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Effects of Oregon’s plan
Oregon could afford to offer Medicaid to all people in povertyReduced unmet need for care in the stateBig improvement in access for people in poverty, despite rationing
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What about Medicaid HMOs?
Gold, Sparer, & Chu, Health Affairs 1996 Enrollment & marketing are
problematic Eligibility turnover stymies managed
care model Effective oversight is essential Capitation rates and risk adjustment
must be done properly
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What about Medicaid HMOs?
Gold, Sparer, & Chu (cont.) Careful carve-outs can preserve
services “Enabling services” such as translation
must be considered Don’t rely entirely on commercial plans Access to care concerns greatest for
chronically ill & special needs
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What about Medicaid HMOs?
Gold, Sparer, & Chu (cont.) Increased reliance on private plans
may reduce funds to safety net providers
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What about the Medicaid expansions?
Until 1988, Medicaid was tied to AFDC eligibilityAfter 1988, Medicaid expanded to other poor and near-poor children and pregnant women
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What effect did Medicaid expansions have?
income
Hours worked0
AFDC
Employmentincome
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What effect did Medicaid expansions have?
income
Hours worked0
AFDC
Employmentincome
AFDC+Medicaid
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What effect did Medicaid expansions have?
Increases in insurance coverage for children David Card, Janet Currie, Dubay, Kenney
Improvements in child health Janet Currie, Dubay
Increases in employment of women Aaron Yelowitz
Low costs per additional enrollee Gordon & Seldon
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State Children’s Health Insurance Plans (SCHIP)
Created in 1997Targeted at near-poor familiesState-federal partnershipSubsidized purchase of health insurance Some states purchase through
Medicaid Some states purchase separately
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Problems with SCHIP implementation
Getting the word outApplication processImmigrant fears
Enrollment grew very slowly
But…3.8 million children enrolled 2nd qtr FY02!
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What about crowding out?
Crowding out is when private insurance is used less when public insurance expands People choose less-expensive public
insurance over private insurance Employers are less likely to offer
insurance when their employees can get public insurance
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Has there been crowding out?
Medicaid crowd out Shore-Sheppard et al. finds less offer to
families of workers, less take-up Blumberg et al. & Yazici et al. find
“displacement”
Center for Studying Health System Change says SCHIP has caused some crowding out http://www.hschange.org/CONTENT/508/