Medicaid continuous eligibility

Analysis Looks at Problems Plaguing Unwinding of Medicaid Continuous Eligibility

Since the end of the continuous Medicaid eligibility that was a major part of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, more than 14 million Americans have lost their Medicaid eligibility. In a new analysis, KFF looks at the challenges both consumers and states have encountered in attempting to review the eligibility of the Medicaid population and to ensure that those who are no longer eligible can be directed to other options for health insurance.  Among the factors addressed in this analysis are: State outreach to affected individuals, the effectiveness of those efforts, and the adjustments states have made along the [...]

2024-01-23T20:01:41-05:00January 24, 2024|hospitals, Medicaid|

Medicaid Redeterminations Trigger Increase in Self-Pay Care

As states continue redetermining Medicaid eligibility for participants who were protected from disenrollment during the COVID-19 emergency, the number of patients telling providers they will pay for their own hospital, primary care, and emergency department visits has risen. The increase in self-pay has been greatest for emergency department visits, and overall, the increases occurred most often in states that began disenrolling Medicaid participants as soon as the continuous eligibility afforded by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act ended. The rise in self-pay patients suggests that many previous Medicaid participants have not obtained new health insurance since their Medicaid eligibility ended. [...]

2023-11-30T19:16:48-05:00December 4, 2023|COVID-19, Medicaid|

Federal Health Policy Update for November 30

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for November 17-30.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. No Surprises Act CMS has released two new FAQs to provide guidance in advance of the Independent Dispute Resolution portal reopening for batched disputes and air ambulance disputes; that service remains temporarily suspended.  These FAQs together explain how certified IDR entities may determine whether a dispute is appropriately batched in light of recent court rulings; provide information about policy for extending existing IDR deadlines once the federal IDR portal reopens to all batched [...]

Medicaid Unwinding Continues

States continue to work on redetermining Medicaid eligibility for those who were enrolled in the program during the period of continuous eligibility that extended through the COVID-19 public health emergency and ended on March 31. Six months into what has come to be known as Medicaid unwinding, approximately 30 percent of the 95 million people enrolled in the program when the unwinding process officially began have now had their eligibility reviewed.  Among them, 16 million have seen their eligibility renewed while 8.8 million have been disenrolled from the program. The numbers vary considerably from state to state, with different states [...]

2023-10-26T06:00:16-04:00October 26, 2023|Medicaid|

Feds Pointing Fingers on Medicaid Unwinding Shortcomings

After months of vague, general assertions about shortcomings in states’ efforts to redetermine the eligibility of their Medicaid participants as part of the post-pandemic continuous Medicaid unwinding process, the federal government is now revealing which states are having problems – and what those problems are. In public letters to the 50 states, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services cites three major shortcomings in states’ efforts:  paperwork problems, long call center waiting times, and the slow processing of applications. According to the letters, 36 states are falling short on at least one of these measures and five are failing on [...]

2023-08-16T06:00:38-04:00August 16, 2023|Medicaid|

Most Medicaid Participants Don’t Know About Looming Eligibility Redetermination

With the COVID-19 pandemic’s continuous Medicaid eligibility set to expire in a little more than a month, nearly two-thirds of the current Medicaid population is unaware their continued participation in the program will soon be subject to review and could result in their loss of health care benefits. According to a survey conducted for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, “In December 2022, more than 6 in 10 adults in Medicaid-enrolled families were not aware of an upcoming return to the regular Medicaid renewal processes…” This could pose a major challenge both for those who lose their Medicaid coverage and may [...]

2023-02-23T06:00:41-05:00February 23, 2023|Medicaid|

Federal Health Policy Update for February 6

The following is the latest health policy news from the federal government for the week of January 23 to February 6.  Some of the language used below is taken directly from government documents. 340B Pharmaceutical companies may restrict the ability of providers to use specialty and community pharmacies to distribute 340B-covered drugs, a federal appeals court has decided.  See the court’s ruling here. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services CMS has revised its fact sheets about COVID-19 public health emergency waivers and flexibilities for different types of providers, updating which waivers and flexibilities have already been terminated, which have been [...]

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