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2005-06 State Medicaid
Cuts & Expansions: Proposed & Enacted
By
Thomas P. McCormack
Alabama--- Has
no spend down; allows only 12 doctor visits & hospital days
yearly and 4 brand name Rx’s monthly (but unlimited generics); but new
SCHIP applications are again allowed. The 2007 Medicaid budget will be
short $200 million. There’s an ADAP waiting list, and extra emergency
federal funding has expired. For more
2003-05 details see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
.The state plans to raise doctor payments.
Alaska---this Title
XVI state, with no spend down, froze its Medicaid nursing
home eligibility level; cut the CHIP level from 200% to 175% (1,200
families lost children’s coverage); tightened
medical qualifications for home personal care for the aged & disabled
& created a SPAP to supplement Part D
for the limited income
aged only—but not the disabled.
There’s an ADAP waiting list, and extra emergency federal funding has
expired.
Arizona---has
no spend down; while a waiver gives AHCCES (waiver Medicaid)
to all uninsured persons under 200% , it unfairly
excludes Medicare patients. Even though CMS did agree to let the
state impose higher co-pays (e.g., $10 per brand name Rx, $5 per
generic, $5 per doctor visit), a court order at least temporarily
blocked them.
Arkansas--- Gov.
Huckabee (R ) raised $100 million in tobacco & income taxes to prevent
elimination of the spend down, Katie Beckett waivers, coverage of eye
exams & glasses for adults & to stop nursing home rate cuts.
But rates are
too low to attract enough dentists
& there’s an ADAP waiting list, now that
extra emergency federal funding has ended.
California--- new
red tape & a reduced income level is taking 200,000 parents off the
rolls. The Democratic legislature killed almost all of Gov.
Schwarzenegger’s ( R ) proposed cuts. Still, he called for premiums ($4
to $27) for those with incomes over 100% or the SSI level,
is forcing the aged & disabled into HMOs (but the legislature
postponed 500,000 of such transfers until at least 1/06), proposed a
yearly patient dental care cap of $1,000 & got bi-partisan legislative
consent to agree with CMS on DSH funding for $3.3 billion more in
federal funds over 5 years (but advocates say this is too little &
doesn’t provide enough state matching funds). On 12/12/05,
the Governor made 5% doctor rate cuts & stopped paying extra Medicare
HMO premiums for dual eligibles. For more 2003-05 details, see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
Colorado---has
no spend down; a court voided a law to deny benefits to
legal aliens & once-blocked CHIP applications are again accepted. A
cut of Medicaid Rx’s to 8 a month--except for HIV, cancer & mental
cases--fizzled after a physician outcry. Denver’s Medical Center & the
University of Colorado Hospital cut their indigents’ care programs &
raised their co-pays. Still, an added $2 million in state funds eased
the ADAP waiting list. Cigarette taxes voted by referendum will raise
the CHIP level from 185% to 200% (enough to cover 4,000 more children),
open 600 more HCB and/or Katie Beckett waiver slots to disabled children
(but the state is incongruously closing some current HCB cases),
raise funding for low income clinics, raise the parents’ income level to
60% (enough to cover 90,000 more), strengthen coverage of the aged &
fund the new breast & cervical cancer Medicaid coverage. And while plans
for a HIFA waiver were dropped, the state plans to save $59 million by
shifting children on Medicaid into HMOs.
For more 2003-05 details see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
Connecticut—a
209(b) state; Governor Rell (R ) vetoed a bill to stop her from seeking
a HIFA waiver; raised family Medicaid & CHIP premiums up to between $10
& $75 monthly (an earlier attempt failed); added co-pays of $1 to $3 for
doctors; raised Medicaid’s $1 Rx co-pay to $1.50 & $3; upped SPAP
premiums from $25 to $30 & its co-pays from $12/$15 to $16.25; imposed a
$100,000 SPAP asset test; required recoveries of SPAP costs from estates
of the deceased; dropped legal aliens from welfare, Medicaid,
CHIP & SAGA (state-funded welfare & medical programs); cut SAGA grants
from $350 a month to $200; forced its patients into HMOs; capped its
medical budget; established a commission
to study Medicaid “reforms”; and ended
Medicaid coverage of chiropractic; naturopathy, occupational, physical/
speech therapy & psychology services for adults.
But the Democratic legislature raised
the parents’ level back up to 150% & repealed the family & CHIP premium
increases; Gov. Rell shelved plans to end waiver coverage for
16,000 CHIP parents; and a freedom of information query showed Medicaid
HMOs’ specialist rates to be too low to attract sufficient providers.
Delaware---has
no spend down; ended its waiver to give
Medicaid to childless, non-disabled adults under 100%. The disabled’s
SPAP coverage is capped, but the aged get added uncapped drug benefits
from a separate, private charity.
District of
Columbia---DC’s non-federally-funded Health Alliance covers all
uninsured persons under 200% except
Medicare & Medicaid eligibles. DC’s Medicaid levels are 100% for the
aged & disabled and 200% for families & children. A 10-year “DC Homes”
plan, with $17 million in DC funds, a $25 million federal grant & up to
$103 million in private funds, will open 2 & expand 7 primary care low
income clinics in poor neighborhoods and a not-yet-implemented DC Rx
Access law will offer Rx discounts to non-Medicaid, non-Medicare
patients.
Florida---Gov. Bush
(R ) began to out-source Medicaid, welfare & food stamp eligibility work
to private contractors; and his waiver
to privatize Medicaid & convert it, using premium support & health
savings account features, into a sort of managed care insurance was
approved by CMS & the legislature
(see Understanding Florida’s Medicaid Waiver Application
at
www.wphf.org; a waiver pilot plan starts in Jacksonville & Ft.
Lauderdale in mid-2006). The state
lowered the aged/disabled income level from 88% to the SSI level (over
77,000 will lose coverage 1/1/06) & set up a Medicaid
“reform” commission. Florida’s skimpy,
aged-only SPAP (which had been transformed into Medicaid Pharmacy Plus
waiver) will be abolished January 1, 2006 & a “fail first”
Medicaid drug rule covers costlier mental health drugs only if cheaper
drugs first fail to work (but Lamictal, Paxil, Wellbutrin, Lexapro,
Zoloft & Zyprexa are exempt). The state restored coverage of adult
dentures; again takes CHIP applications anytime instead of only 2 months
a year; and a “SUNCAP” program will enroll SSI recipients for food
stamps without requiring welfare office visits.
Children’s, health , doctor & dentist groups
are pressing for legislation—and even filed suit---to raise fees for
children’s care & thus increase health access.
Georgia---the state
ended spend downs to get nursing home care; lowered the CHIP income
level from 235% to 200%; and ended CHIP coverage of vision care, oral
surgery & other dental procedures. It cut the Medicaid & WIC level for
pregnant women (7,500 lost coverage) & infants from 235% to 185%; raised
CHIP premiums from $10 monthly to $35; ended adult coverage for
emergency dental care & artificial limbs; is forcing one million
patients (including 100,000 aged & disabled, for an estimated $42
million is savings) into HMOs (now delayed
until 4/06); dropped adult dental
care, orthotics, prosthetics & hospice care; planned time limits on
eligibility for patients in the breast/cervical cancer category;
set up a Medicaid “reform” commission; capped HCB expenses; and
tightened medical eligibility for & added cost-sharing fees to Katie
Beckett waiver care. After over 45,000
children lost CHIP, Gov. Pedue (R ) sought a CMS HIFA waiver to cut
nursing home access, raise Rx & other co-pays (even for children &
nursing home patients) & add more managed care & health savings account
features to Medicaid and required applicants
(except pregnant women & newborns) to submit papers proving income &
citizenship/legal residence. But a state health board voted to
ease the 90 day coverage suspensions for children with parents
delinquent in paying CHIP premiums. The state’s ADAP may have to adopt
some cost-containment measures. In 2005, CMS forbade further use of
accounting gimmicks bringing in $300 million yearly in added federal
funds; state, CMS & hospital officials began re-negotiating allocation
of DSH funds ($419 million in 2004); and rising tax revenues will let
the state cut far less than the $269 to $388 million first projected.
Hawaii—a 209(b)
state; a waiver gives Medicaid to all the uninsured under 200%,
except for aged & disabled, who must be under 100% to get it.
State law makes employers offer health coverage to employees &
dependents. The state created a SPAP to
supplement Part D for aged and disabled patients,
but with an income level of only 100%.
Idaho---this Title
XVI state, with no spend down, raised the CHIP level from
150% to 185% (but with less benefits & more co-pays than for poorer
patients) & funded a pilot health plan for 1,000 adults with new taxes.
But it cut funds for a state-county medical program for the temporarily
disabled & those awaiting SSA disability decisions and
is seeking a waiver to divide the Medicaid/CHIP
caseload into 3 classes--healthy parents & children; the disabled &
chronically ill; and the aged—and then charge higher premiums & co-pays
(even above the federal ceiling) to the first class (but
perhaps the others too) and tailor different (possibly more limited)
benefit packages for each class. There’s an ADAP waiting list,
now that extra emergency federal funding has expired.
Illinois---this
209(b) state’s main SPAP (funded as a Medicaid
Pharmacy Plus waiver) excludes the disabled (who get only
a limited formulary from a separate Circuit Breaker SPAP); and
although a 2005 law authorized making the disabled eligible for
the main SPAP’s full formulary,
the state still limits the disabled to the old
narrow formulary. But the state
raised the family income level to 185%
(covering 56,000 more adults & children),
eased eligibility red tape & passed a
hospital tax to fund Medicaid. It then raised
income levels even higher to cover 253,000 more
children & agreed to a court order raising doctors’, specialists & EPSDT
rates for children’s care by $45 million a year to boost access.
The legislature voted a $70 million cut in HMO rates & a Lewin study
projected 5 year savings of $1.5 billion if
the state forces patients into HMOs, which it will now do to pay
for the children’s expansion (HMO enrollment had been voluntary).
Indiana---this
209(b) state’s SPAP still excludes the disabled;
and, despite court suits, it still has a much-stricter-than-SSI
“209(b)” Medicaid disability rule (one must be fatally or
incurably ill). Gov. Daniels (formerly the GOP
federal budget-cutting czar) once called for more taxes on the rich to
prevent Medicaid cuts, but was then silenced by anti-tax zealots. The
state will double CHIP premiums & cut the HCB waiver budget by $14
million in 2006 but will let Medicare patients
into its risk pool for secondary coverage (including drugs) at
discounted rates & will add 500 more HCB waiver slots (but a KPMG
audit found many waiver problems). The state had to take emergency ADAP
cost-containment measures and is soliciting bids for a $1 billion
contract to privatize food stamp, welfare & Medicaid eligibility, which
will close most of the 107 welfare offices now employing 2,500 public
workers.
Iowa---the state
avoided cutbacks & even got a waiver to offer Medicaid (with premiums up
to 5% of income) to up to 30,000 more persons--whether they’re aged,
disabled, a parent or not--with incomes under 200% but only at two
public hospitals. Yet there’s actually
no concrete waiver outpatient drug benefit: Waiver
patients who are also previous U. of Iowa hospital “state papers”
indigent program patients are supposedly, but only nominally,
grandfathered-in, for one year only & with often-unaffordable co-pays,
for its former[limited] free drug formulary; while Polk County [Des
Moines-area] residents on the waiver can also access that county’s
public hospital free outpatient [limited] formulary; but outpatient drug
coverage for other waiver eligibles is sketchy or
non-existent. The ADAP waiting list was only partially & temporarily
served by now-expired extra emergency federal funding---although
$275,000 in state funds were added to the ADAP budget. A state
legislative committee began studying ways to cut Medicaid,
but Gov. Vilsack proposed a 80-cent
hike in the cigarette tax to subsidize health insurance for workers with
employers of 25 or less.
Kansas---this Title XVI
state’s SPAP will end on January, 1, 2006.
Spurning Gov. Sibelius’ (D) call for more health coverage, the GOP
legislature passed only token health insurance “reforms”, a limited tax
credit to expand small firm health coverage, health savings account
measures & a health care re-organization plan. But
a new hospital tax will fund higher hospital &
physician rates & Blue Cross, with foundation support, will subsidize
health insurance for Kansas City-area families earning under $30,000.
The state will have to adopt ADAP cost containment measures by March,
2006. A legislative committee studying ways to cut Medicaid
has so far called only for more
anti-fraud efforts, even though the
state must now repay $120 million taken from road funds to avoid health
& other cuts during the 2001-03 recession.
Kentucky--- the
state had already cut rates for pregnancy & well-baby care,
immunizations & health screening at county clinics; hired a PBM & a
“disease management” firm for Rx & other savings; and raised Rx co-pays
to $1 per generic, $2 per preferred brand name & $3 per non-preferred
brand name drug. But it dropped earlier-tightened nursing home & HCB
care medical qualification rules; raised the
cigarette tax by 30 cents-a-pack (to fund education & Medicaid)
with a further 10-cent raise under study; even reinstated 2,500
formerly-dropped mentally ill clients; and
passed legislation to create a SPAP to supplement Part D Extra Help
for the
aged only---but
not the disabled---but has failed to implement it.
There’s an ADAP waiting list, now that extra emergency federal funding
has expired—and there’s $215 million state funds Medicaid shortfall for
fiscal 2006. That, and CMS’ decision to ban the use of county hospital,
clinic & nursing home budgets as state matching funds, could cost the
state $100 million & led it to seek limits of
4-prescriptions-a-month, 15 occupational/physical therapy visits-a-year
& 12 x-rays/MRIs-a-year (with appeals
allowed), $2 to $10 co-pays for doctor
visits, $2 to $20 co-pays for other outpatient care, $10 to $20 co-pays
for non-emergency ER visits & a whopping $20 to $50 co-pay per
hospital stay (but with annual
cost-sharing caps of $225 a person & $350 a family,
except for non-Louisville-area patients, who’ll
be put into an HMO with a $450 cap;
children would face only Rx co-pays; and all preventive care would be
co-pay exempt)—and to seek waivers
for co-pays of $3 per generic, $10 for
“preferred” & $22 for “non-preferred” brand name Rx’s
for spend downers.
Louisiana---the
state cut allowed Rx’s from 8 to 5 monthly. An
attempt to impose a 200% eligibility level for free care in the State
Charity Hospital System died (since its creation by Huey Long in the
1920s, it has accepted anyone unable to pay). In 2005, the
state closed 210 mental health & disability centers, ended many Charity
Hospital services, cut school health care & adopted a formulary. A new
hospital tax-- designed to generate $200 million more in state & federal
funds--passed after a $1-a-pack cigarette tax was defeated. The state
had to adopt some ADAP cost-containment measures. CMS dropped its claim
for a refund of $340 million from past matching funds because of a
questionable financing scheme. Hurricanes
Katrina & Rita by 10/14 had added 60,000 + cases to Medicaid (with at
least as many being denied due to delayed emergency federal funding to
expand eligibility); cut state revenues ($1 billion+ for 2005-06 in a
legislative study; $1 to $3 billion+ in a federal CBO estimate); left
the State Charity Hospital System with no funding after November, 2005;
and would have forced Medicaid cuts of $300 million+ in state funds
(and thus $500 million+ in regular federal matching funds) that could
have removed over 100,000 children & many others from the rolls and
ended Rx coverage for 100,000 more.
But while the Budget Reconciliation bill
includes $2.1 billion for paying
all of LA’s & MS’ Medicaid & uncompensated
care costs at a 100% match for as long as that money lasts,
final enactment is delayed until
Senate-House differences are ironed out after the Christmas break and it
is signed into law. That postponement or any further delay will require
the state to make immediate Medicaid cuts of at least $200 million.
Maine---the state
subsidized health insurance for small employers’ workers & their
families; raised the Medicaid income level for the childless aged &
disabled to 125% (but stopped taking applications from childless, non-disabled
adults under 65) & for parents to 200%; and adopted a formulary (with
physician over-rides allowed). After funding shortages threatened
coverage of adult dental care; hearing aids & tests, physical,
occupational & speech therapy; psychological services; and prosthetics &
orthotics, the state raised income taxes on the rich & on tobacco,
alcohol, hotels, restaurants, car rentals & soft drinks to fund health
care but also appointed a commission to study ways to cut Medicaid
expenses.
Maryland---almost
all Governor Ehrlich’s (R ) planned health cuts failed in the Democratic
legislature, but he did get a ban on new CHIP patients with
incomes over 200% and, at least temporarily, CHIP premium raises.
He also set up a Medicaid “reform” commission & dropped coverage
for legal immigrant children & pregnant women who’ve been
here less than 5 years---but the legislature may well reverse this too
in early 2006. The state’s lower income band
SPAP now excludes Medicare patients, while its higher
income band SPAP continues to exclude the disabled and
even reduced benefits. While the state did start a
high risk health insurance pool, in
11/05 a state insurance regulatory board moved to allow small employer
health plans covering 450,000 persons to drop all meaningful
prescription coverage.
Massachusetts---after almost all of Gov. Romney’s (R ) health cuts
(except ending almost all MassHealth adult dental care; see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7378.cfm
for details) failed or were reversed by the Democratic legislature, he
supported cheap, limited benefit, high cost-sharing policies for the
uninsured; more enrollment in Medicaid, a higher minimum wage for firms
that don’t offer health plans & a “ CAP”
program to give food stamps automatically to SSI recipients; and drafted
a plan to give health insurance to 500,000 more persons. But he
established a Medicaid “reform” commission; called for tougher work
rules even for disabled welfare clients
awaiting SSA disability decisions; limited state-funded “Free Care”
patients to low income clinics; and imposed $3 clinic & generic drug and
$5 ER & brand name drug co-pays on them. The state may be forced to
adopt ADAP cost containment by early 2006. In October, 2005, an informal
waiver giving the state $585 million extra in federal funds to match
state funds from questionable financing schemes was expiring; and
threatened to cut $385 million in Medicaid funds if the state doesn’t
somehow insure half a million more residents.
The House passed a bill imposing 5% to 7% payroll taxes on employers of
10 or more who don’t offer health insurance to raise $176 million yearly
to boost the CHIP income level from 200% to 300% & the parental level
from 133% to 200%; cover childless, non-disabled adults under 100%; and
subsidize health insurance for 200,000 more (the Senate then passed a
slightly less liberal bill). When and if a compromise bill is passed by
both Houses, Gov. Romney may or
may not sign it. He also restored dental
coverage for women who are pregnant or have children under age 3. A bill
expected to pass and be signed into law by January 1 offers up to 30
days’ of state-financed Medicaid drug coverage for dual eligibles whose
transition to Part D is troubled or whose Part D plans don’t cover drugs
they need.For more 2003-05 details, see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
.
Michigan---
the state, even with raised tobacco & hospital taxes, still had to end
almost all Medicaid adult dental, hearing aid, podiatry & chiropractic
care. The GOP House majority appointed a task force to study ways to
further cut Medicaid. A GOP-passed Senate bill creates $5 monthly
premiums for all non-pregnant, non-disabled adults; imposes co-pays of
$10 for some brand name drug; charges $2 co-pays for doctor visits, $25
for ER visits & $50 per hospitalization; and raises other Rx co-pays.
Gov. Granholm (D) called the bill “unprecedented in [its] cruelty”; but
signed a bi-partisan compromise to grandfather-in current
recipients; adopt the GOP Senate’s cost-sharing plan; probably impose
stricter eligibility rules for new applicants only; or
even mandate urine testing for smoking & sugary/fatty diets for
non-disabled adults (who’ll then face $10 penalty premiums), but did
restore adult dental coverage. The aged-only SPAP will be ended when
Medicare Part D drug coverage starts in 2006. For more 2003-05 details,
see http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
Minnesota---this
209(b) state earlier added the disabled to its SPAP, then raised
premiums & co-pays for Medicaid, CHIP & MinnesotaCare (state-subsidized
health insurance) & cut the latter’s income levels; and denied Medicaid
& CHIP to legal aliens. But GOP plans to abolish the State
General Medical Assistance Program (state-only-funded medical care for
the childless who are jobless or disabled & awaiting SSA disability
decisions) & cut 30,000 from MinnesotaCare failed --and some
previously-cut MinnesotaCare medical supplies coverage was
restored--after Gov.Pawlenty (R ) and
the Democratic Senate agreed to a compromise to end a budget standoff
that had closed state offices by enacting a 75-cents-a-pack cigarette
“impact fee”. A 2005 court order voided a state law allowing Medicaid
providers to deny care or Rx’sto patients who don’t make co-pays,
yet the state’s ADAP began dropping patients
who don’t or can’t make co-pays.
Mississippi---has
no spend down; will lower its
Medicaid level for all aged & disabled from 135% down to
the SSI level on 1/1/06---causing 65,000 aged & disabled to lose
Medicaid—but will then raise it that
same day back up to 150% (but only
for those aged & disabled on Medicare). The state says it has a
waiver to keep using the old, higher aged/disabled level for transplant,
dialysis, chemo & mental patients, plus about 7,000
non-Medicare-qualified disabled clients, but lacks funds for 2,000+ HIV
patients losing Medicaid. A state
committee began studying Medicaid “reform”.
Brand name drugs were cut to only 2 monthly (plus 3
generics), but with an informal
exception allowing 5 brand name drugs for HIV
patients. A lawsuit challenging the drug limits has been filed.
A state study estimated state revenue
losses from Hurricane Katrina at $213 to $272 million+ just for 2005’s
last quarter, but the Budget
Reconciliation bill includes $2.1 billion for paying
all of MS’ & LA’s Medicaid & uncompensated
care costs at a 100% match for as long as that money lasts.
Missouri---this
209(b) state cut the aged/disabled income level from 100% to 85%; ended
state medical & welfare programs for the temporarily disabled & those
awaiting SSA disability decisions; ended Ticket to Work Medicaid for the
working disabled; cut the parents’ income level to 23% from 75% (but a
court order will reinstate those parents who can qualify for
welfare-to-work Transitional Medical Assistance or as disabled or aged);
ended adult dentistry, hearing aid, crutches, wheelchair maintenance,
walkers & eyeglasses benefits; enacted new & bigger Medicaid co-pays;
raised CHIP premiums & required 46,000 previously-exempt children to pay
premiums (causing nearly half to lose coverage; state officials then
rescinded the 6 month penalty waiting period for re-enrollment of those
losing CHIP due to premium delinquency); and tightened medical
qualifications for nursing home, HCB & home health care. But CHIP
co-pays were ended & the SPAP was adapted to
supplement Part D for low income patients & expanded to cover
the disabled (but not
those in the 2 year waiting period).
Blue Cross, with foundation support, will subsidize health insurance for
Kansas City-area families earning under $30,000 The state’s ADAP
had to adopt some cost-containment measures. A
partisanly-divided state Medicaid “reform” committee called for
different benefit packages & cost-sharing for families & children, the
disabled and the aged; more cost-sharing for almost all patients;
but also for restoring the just-dropped
coverage of the working disabled (any FICA-taxed work would qualify;
countable earnings, after all SSI disregards, must be under 250% FPL;
but a very low unearned income [e.g., SSDI] limit
would severely limit eligibility).
Meanwhile, health advocates started a petition for a referendum to add
80-cents-a-pack more in tobacco taxes to restore Medicaid cuts.
Montana---the state
added more & bigger co-pays to Medicaid & CHIP, slashed TANF (welfare)
grants, restricted nursing home eligibility, cut doctor visits for the
aged & disabled to 10 yearly, dropped coverage of some hospice & home
health care & added red tape to cut enrollment--but did find money to
end the CHIP waiting list. The state’s “Passport to Health” program
saves $20 million yearly by assigning primary care doctors to patients
to reduce ER & hospitalization costs. The state is seeking a HIFA waiver
to fund a higher CHIP income level to cover 10,000 more children & give
watered-down Medicaid to 3,000 more adults and
created a SPAP to pay up to $33.11 in Part D premiums for those aged
and disabled Medicare patients under 200% (but
won’t pay any deductibles, co-pays or coinsurance or for
drugs uncovered by Part D plans, nor cover those disabled
still in the 2 year waiting period). There’s an ADAP waiting
list, now that extra emergency federal funding has expired. A state-Blue
Cross agreement on financing a $12 million rise in CHIP costs without
higher premiums, a referendum-raised tobacco tax & more state money
will fund 2,000 more children on CHIP.
Nebraska----this
Title XVI state ended coverage for
15,000 welfare-to-work parents & childless, non-disabled 19 &
20-year-olds. There’s an ADAP waiting
list, now that extra emergency federal funding has expired.
A state committee suggested Medicaid savings
(making it a “defined contribution” plan & promoting assisted
living & HCB waivers over nursing home care) of $72 million a year (see
http://www.hhs.state.ne.us/med/reform/
). But, while stopping short of creating a full—fledged SPAP,
the state will pay Part D co-pays for those dual eligible
Medicare-Medicaid patients in SNFs, ICFs & HCB waiver programs and
assisted living, personal care, adult family, board & care & group
homes.
Nevada---this Title
XVI state, with no spend down, ended its disregard of
unemployment benefits & dropped plans to end the asset test for pregnant
women & child-only coverage. Yet it raised $1 billion in new taxes to
fund Medicaid; added Ticket to Work
coverage for the working disabled; raised the SPAP’s income level,
adapted it to supplement Part D for limited income patients &
added SPAP coverage of the disabled (including
those in the 2 year wait); planned to use unspent CHIP money
(with a waiver) & a CMS risk pool grant to fund health insurance for
small employers’ workers & their dependents;
added limited adult dental & vision care; added $746,000 to ADAP
funding; raised CHIP premiums;
rejected adding Medicaid co-pays for
Rx’s & other care; and set up a
committee to study further Medicaid budget cuts.
New
Hampshire---this 209(b) state’s holdover Medicaid Director, often
without the Governor’s consent, works with the GOP legislature (which
set up a Medicaid “reform” committee)
for a HIFA waiver to tighten nursing home eligibility. But Gov. Lynch
(D) called for more CHIP enrollment & he added $180,000 more to ADAP.
A state law authorized a SPAP to supplement Part D for low income aged
and disabled Medicare patients
(excluding the disabled in the 2
year wait), but funding plans collapsed;
it enacted a 28 cents-a-pack tobacco tax increase to help fund
health costs but tied it to road toll & Medicaid changes that could
undermine funding; and plans to hire a private firm to ‘coordinate”, and
foster cheaper, better care for, the chronically ill & heavy users.
It still has a much-stricter-than-SSI “209(b)” Medicaid disability rule
(one must be fatally or incurably ill).The state’s
ADAP had to adopt some cost-containment measures.
New Jersey---after
earlier cuts in the parental income level & dropping legal
aliens, the state stopped paying hospital bills in its non-federal
medical program for the temporarily disabled & those awaiting SSA
disability decisions. In 2005, it contracted to privatize eligibility
determinations for CHIP, FamilyHealth & Medicaid.. But Acting Governor
Codey (D) signed bilIs to simplify eligibility
red tape, to gradually raise the parental FamilyHealth income level back
up to 133% (enough to cover 80,000 more parents) and to reject
proposed co-pays for Rx’s, doctor visits & supervised adult day care.
New Mexico—has
no spend down; its Medicaid waiver expansion to uninsured
adults under 200% still excludes disabled & aged Medicare eligibles.
The state established a Medicaid “reform” commission
and plans to—or, as necessary, is seeking waivers to--impose
co-pays of $2 per Rx, $5 per office visit, $15 per ER visit & $25 per
hospital admission ; to require an “enrollment fee” of $25 & a $10
annual premium; to eliminate rural transport costs to get prescriptions;
to end adult eyeglasses & other medical equipment coverage; and to stop
non-emergency coverage for illegal aliens. But
Gov. Richardson changed eligibility re-certifications to once, rather
than twice, a year; boosted outreach; will raise income levels enough to
cover 7,800 more children & pregnant women; proposed $7.5 million in tax
credits for employers of 10 or less to subsidize health insurance; and
added enough state funds to cover one month more of heating bills
in LIHEAP.
New York---a
“Family Health” waiver covers parents under 150% & childless (even
non-disabled) adults under 100% but not childless Medicare
patients (who must be under the lower SSI/SSP level for Medicaid).
State-subsidized health insurance for workers under 250% excludes
part timers & Medicare patients & caps yearly Rx bills at $3,000.
The legislature failed to enact a bill to add the disabled to the SPAP;
began forcing SSI recipients into HMOs; imposed a 9 month uninsured
waiting period for & and forbade public employees from getting, Family
Health; raised its co-pays to $5 for doctors & dentists; and to $3 for
generic & $6 for brand name Rx’s; ended non-clinic podiatrist coverage;
raised other Medicaid Rx co-pays to $1 per generic & $3
for brands; capped yearly Medicaid co-pays at $200; adopted a
consumer-friendly formulary; raised nursing home & hospital taxes; is
planning cheaper assisted living & adult day care instead of costlier
nursing homes; still seeks a HIFA waiver; and seeks
to extend its unique waiver allowing & even funding HMOs, local groups &
clinics to enroll & re-certify patients (they’ve added one million to
the rolls). The state Counties’ Association has a group studying
ways to cut Medicaid & a lawsuit alleges that
those moving to new counties must re-apply all over again, in violation
of CMS rules. For more 2003-05 details see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
North Carolina---in
2003-04 the state cut Medicaid’s income level for pregnant women &
infants from 185% to 151% & denied Medicaid to childless, non-disabled
19 & 20 year-olds, but still found $2.765 million more for ADAP. In 2005
the final budget did not lower the aged/disabled income
level from 100% to 73%, cut 8,000 others off the rolls or
slash home attendant care (as proposed); instead it added coverage
of the working disabled & gave $1 million more to ADAP; but cut Rx’s to
5 brand names a month (with unlimited generics).
There’s a long ADAP waiting list again
(it was only briefly wiped out by extra state & federal funding),
the aged-only SPAP ends 1/1/06 & CMS questioned the propriety of $80
million+ in Medicaid HCB & case management services for the severely &
developmentally disabled.
North Dakota---this
209(b) state established a Medicaid “reform”
commission.
Ohio---this 209(b)
state cut the parental income level from 100% to 90% (27,000 lost
Medicaid); raised Rx co-pays to the $3 federal maximums; cut the adult
dental care budget by 50%, severely reducing access; cut some vision,
podiatry & psychologist services; cut Medicaid secondary payments for
dual eligibles also on Medicare; ordered all parents, children &
disabled not on Medicare into HMOs; slashed $80 million over 2 years
from the non-federal Disability Medical Assistance program for over
15,000 disabled & awaiting SSA determinations; allowed providers to
refuse service to patients who don’t meet co-pays (even though it’s
against current federal law); but still created over 2,000 new HCB
waiver slots and—after ineptly forfeiting $500,000+ in federal funds to
plan & run the program-- added coverage of the
working disabled. (Ohio’s regular
aged/disabled Medicaid level—less than $500 monthly--has long been the
nation’s lowest.) In summer, 2005,
a state legislative committee began studying
ways to further cut Medicaid.
Oklahoma---this
209(b) state cut the Medicaid level from 185% to 100% for children over
1 & from 100% to 73% for the aged & disabled, ended the spend down for
families & children, re-imposed a
“3-prescriptions-a-month” limit and even cut the nursing home & HCB
waiver income level down to the SSI level. In 2005 Gov. Henry (D) added
coverage of the breast & cervical cancer eligibility category but GOP
House leaders offered $63 million more in state oil revenues to raise
hospital rates only if $100 million in
savings from “reforms” (i.e.,cuts) are made. A
referendum raised tobacco taxes enough to fund a Medicaid HIFA waiver to
subsidize health insurance for over 50,000 small firm employees & their
spouses with incomes under 185%; Gov. Henry & the legislature added $5
million in state funds to the $8 million LIHEAP & $2 million low income
home weatherization budgets, may add even more & asked energy & church
groups for donations too (but consumer advocates say
another $6 million is still needed) while a state legislative
committee began studying ways to further cut Medicaid and the state’s
ADAP had to adopt some cost-containment measures.
Oregon---a Title
XVI state; a tax cut referendum caused 70,000+ childless, non-SSI & non-TANF
adults to lose coverage through income level cuts & big premium raises &
ended spend down eligibility for all but transplant & HIV patients
(Oregon Health Plan enrollment fell over 50%). To carry out the
legislature’s latest cuts, the state will limit adult dental care; end
adult vision & all OTC pharmacy coverage; limit urban non-HMO
in-hospital days to 18 yearly; and take more ADAP cost containment
steps. Yet the state did enact mental health/substance abuse parity for
private health insurance.
Pennsylvania---budget shortages made the state at least temporarily
close enrollments for state-subsidized “AdultBasic” health insurance for
adults under 200% (which excludes Medicare patients &
has no pharmacy benefit) & the
state’s SPAP still fails to cover the disabled under age 65--even
though the state will save $100 million every 6 months from the new
Medicare Part D drug program.
Consumer groups filed suit objecting to state-CMS plans to enroll dual
eligibles in pre-selected, individual Part D plans. Gov. Rendell (D) &
the GOP legislature agreed to premiums of $40+ monthly plus more &
higher co-pays for Katie Becket waiver children in families making over
$40,000; and cutting covered inpatient hospital stays to twice a year
(but only once yearly for General Assistance patients), inpatient
rehabilitation stays to once a year & doctor or clinic visits to 18 a
year for adult male patients. But they
rejected higher Rx co-pays & monthly numerical
Rx limits & Gov. Rendell secured $85 million more from state Blue Cross
plans for the AdultBasic insurance budget.
The state will be forced to adopt ADAP cost containment measures
by 3/06. The state’s Blue Cross plans (which are CHIP contractors) were
caught improperly enrolling poor children in their own
$50-monthly-premium “Special” plans---which, unlike CHIP, have no
dental, vision, hearing or drug coverage—instead of CHIP.
Rhode Island---the
state resisted pressure to close enrollment or cut the 185% parental
income level for RIghtCare (a waivered Medicaid/CHIP expansion) &
instead added limited coverage of the disabled over 55 to its
previously aged-only, limited-formulary SPAP & offered Ticket to Work
Medicaid to the working disabled.
South
Carolina---has no spend down; a SPAP operated as a
Pharmacy Plus Medicaid waiver covers the aged between 100% to 200%--but
not the disabled (who must be under 100% to get full
Medicaid). The state also raised co-pays for some families on
Medicaid & CHIP; cut covered Medicaid Rx’s from 4 to 3 monthly; and
added co-pays of $2 for doctor visits; $3 for dentists; $3 for medical
equipment; and $1 for optometrists, chiropractors & podiatrists (its Rx
co-pays were already at the $3 ceiling). The state
asked for CMS waivers to introduce Medicaid
“debit card accounts” (a form of health savings accounts); to set even
higher co-pays (e.g., $5 per Rx, $100 per hospitalization. $25 per
outpatient surgery); to deny coverage to non-disabled, childless 19- &
20-year olds; and to end EPSDT services at age 18—but
then dropped the children’s waiver proposals after a public outcry
(there’s still a court suit to block the whole waiver).
The SPAP was altered to cover all but a
5% coinsurance of drug costs for Part D patients with incomes under 200%
after they reach the donut hole (it also reduces the
otherwise-applicable 15% coinsurance to 5% for those with incomes
between 135% and 150% after they reach what would—without the Extra Help
coverage they enjoy--otherwise be their donut hole)
but it still excludes the
disabled, on Medicare or not. The state sought, but was denied, a
waiver to use federally-matched Medicaid funds to defray Part D Rx
co-pays for HCB waiver and residential care facility SSP/Medicaid
patients (Part D exempts only
those in actual nursing homes or medical facilities from its co-pays).
South Dakota---has
no spend down; it planned to set up a high risk health
insurance pool & its ADAP had to adopt
some cost-containment measures.
Tennessee----the
state finally got court approval to end Tenncare (waivered Medicaid)
coverage of 191,000+ aged, disabled, parents & “uninsurable” childless,
non-disabled adults with incomes over SSI or TANF levels. Children are
exempt from cuts & some frail aged & disabled who are “too rich” for SSI
or TANF will somehow be “grandfathered-in” for watered-down coverage
(with higher premiums, deductibles & co-pays than for those on residual
Medicaid). Except for pregnant women, children & HIV+ or physically
disabled persons, doctor’s visits are limited to 10 yearly
(but only after 6/30/06), hospital days
to 45 (again, only after 6/30/06) &
Rx’s to 2 brand names plus 3 generics monthly (with no exceptions &
co-pays of $3; but without limiting HIV & Hepatitis C
drugs). The state adopted a formulary; will set ER co-pays at $5 (or
even $5 for some brand name Rx’s if CMS agrees); raise co-pays still
more for grandfathered, non-SSI, non-TANF adults ($10/$15 per Rx & up to
$40 for doctors!); and end methadone coverage. As token sops, it offered
aged/disabled ex-patients temporary Rx discount cards for up to 55 free
generics (plus one brand-name anti-psychotic a month for the mentally
ill); budgeted (but is only slowly disbursing) $20 million more for low
income & county clinics (at least 39 of which,
with increased medical staffing, will see any limited income
patients for co-pays of only $5, including the dispensing of some
outpatient drugs), $5 million for post-transplant care & $3
million for cancer care of ex-Tenncare patients;
gave patients with cancer, hemophilia, kidney
failure and transplants, even if they lose Tenncare, “safety net”
services through 6/06; continued home
nursing care until 6/06 and covered Weight Watchers for the obese
(with $1 co-pays per session). But it had to take ADAP cost containment
measures. Yet with savings from the recent cuts,
the state planned again covering up to 100,000
medically needy persons (giving them yearly eligibility);
raising income levels for pregnant women & infants; adding hundreds of
HCB waiver slots; and widening home health care eligibility & services.
Texas—In 2003-04
the state dropped its family-only spend down (single aged & disabled
never could spend down); ended CHIP coverage of prostheses, physical
therapy & private duty nursing; tightened CHIP asset rules; imposed $10
to $20 co-pays for CHIP doctor visits & Rx’s; raised CHIP premiums much
more; counted income for CHIP more strictly; imposed a 90 day wait to
enroll in CHIP; reduced Medicaid home health care for the aged &
disabled; and ended adult chiropractic & podiatry coverage. But a state
“personal responsibility” law denying Medicaid to parents who abuse
drugs or alcohol or whose children miss school, immunizations or medical
or dental checkups was voided by a court. The state established a
Medicaid “reform” commission & is seeking a waiver to force TANF
children & families in 8 large counties into HMOs that will spend $109
million less on their care each 2 years, but complex hospital
rate issues delayed similar HMO contracts for the aged & disabled. Texas
awarded $899 million to a private firm for food stamp, TANF & Medicaid
eligibility work, laying off 2,900 state eligibility workers & closing
100 welfare offices. Texas ADAP had to take cost-containment measures,
especially for access to Fuzeon; but the legislature restored Medicaid &
CHIP mental health, vision & hearing aid coverage & CHIP dental care. In
August, 2005, a court found the state in violation of an order for
better EPSDT outreach. For more 2003-05 details, see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm.
Utah---the state’s
HIFA waiver gives watered-down Medicaid (no hospital, specialists’,
nursing home, home health or other ancillary care; very high drug &
other co-pays) to all uninsured adults under 150% --except for
disabled & aged Medicare eligibles (who must be under 100% to get
full, regular Medicaid). The state also ended Medicaid coverage
for adults of podiatry, audiology, speech, occupational & physical
therapy, vision & non-emergency dental care for non-disabled adults (but
partly & only temporarily restored the dental coverage on10/1/05) and
cut chiropractic coverage. The state’s
ADAP had to adopt some cost-containment measures.
Vermont—Gov. Douglas’ (R )
proposals—except for a cut in adult dental care-- failed in the
Democratic legislature & he vetoed a bill to cover the uninsured.
But CMS approved his proposed
“HIFA” waiver which, in exchange for about $400
million extra to meet projected 5 year deficits, will force patients
into HMOs, promote HCB care over nursing homes & tighten up asset
transfer bans-- but also cap future federal funds. The waiver oot
final legislative approval in 12/05.
Virginia---a 209(b)
state: with $1.3 billion in new sales, tobacco & corporate taxes
outgoing Gov.Warner (D) streamlined CHIP; protected the 80%-of-FPL
aged/disabled Medicaid level; cut the regressive food sales tax;
raised hospital & nursing home rates; funded 700 more HCB waiver slots;
increased dental payments & coverage; covered 100,000 more children; and
added $17.9 million (plus $2.7 million from utilities) to the $30
million LIHEAP budget. In spite of Gov.Tim Kaine’s (D) election,
the GOP legislature plans to “study” those who conceal excess assets or
income; create Medicaid health savings accounts for patients; force more
of them into HMOs ; and, of course, increase their cost-sharing.
Washington---the
state reinstated 12 month Medicaid eligibility for children after over
20,000 lost coverage; dropped legal aliens from Medicaid & CHIP
(but later reinstated many of the dropped alien CHIP patients, is
restoring even more & accepting applications from new ones---although
probably only about one-third of the thousands now applying can be
covered the first year); cut Basic Health (state-subsidized insurance
for those ineligible for Medicare or Medicaid) enrollment from 130,000
to 100,000 & raised its premiums & co-pays; and
established a Medicaid “reform” commission. But since added
tobacco, gasoline & other taxes to prevent cuts weren’t voted until
2005, 63,000 patients lost Medicaid or CHIP. The state dropped plans for
children’s Medicaid premiums; restored limited adult dental care; passed
mental health insurance parity; and found $82 million more for mental
health & substance abuse services, $24 million more for the homeless;
and $100 million more for affordable housing. But with a half-billion
dollar budget increase for Medicaid and related programs looming for
2007-09, Gov. Gregoire (D) announced plans to focus on administrative
reforms; tighter prescription controls; and targeted case management for
chronic, high-cost patients. For more 2003-05 details, see
http://www.kff.org/medicaid/7314.cfm
.
West Virginia---a
raised tobacco tax only briefly put off Medicaid cuts & the state even
cut its pitifully-low welfare grants by 25%. State officials called for
$3 ER visit co-pays, a monthly limit of 4 brand name drugs & “health
investment accounts” that also deter smoking & reward healthy
lifestyles. There’s an ADAP waiting list, now
that extra emergency federal funding has expired. West Virginia
Access-- a new state health insurance risk pool-- began to operate. Yet
the state cut medical transport, incontinence, medical equipment &
wheelchair supply funding & sought a waiver for a Medicaid “total
re-design” & to cut its HCB waiver slots from about 5,000 to under
3,500.
Wisconsin---in
spite of big Medicaid budget deficits for 3+ years & continuing
financial spats between Gov. Doyle (D) & the GOP legislature, the state
still hasn’t yet made any significant Medicaid, BadgerCare or CHIP cuts
(other than small co-pay increases). The state wants CMS to let it force
patients into HMOs & got its Medicaid Pharmacy Plus waiver funding the
Senior Care SPAP (making it a sort of souped-up Part D/Extra Help plan
with a 240% income level) extended to 6/30/07,
but failed to add coverage of the disabled.
A state legislative committee began to study ways to cut Medicaid.
Wyoming---has
no spend down; the state SPAP
(once open to anyone--aged, disabled or not)
will now cover only non-Medicare
eligibles (but
will continue to cover
those disabled in the 2 year waiting period)
under an income level of only 100%. A state committee began to
study ways to cut Medicaid, even though the state’s new Healthy Together
program had already saved $15.6 million in preventing un-needed ER
visits & hospitalizations, just in the first half of 2005, by assigning
care managers (RNs, social workers, etc.) to chronically ill & other
Medicaid patients.
For the 48 states & DC, the 2005 federal poverty level (FPL) is $9570
yearly ($798 monthly) for one plus $3260 yearly ($272 monthly) for
each additional family member; levels are higher in Alaska & Hawaii (see
www.dhhs.gov
).
States’ August, 2003
cost-sharing, premium & co-pay rules & amounts for Medicaid & SCHIP
patients appear in “Medicaid and SCHIP:
States’ Premium and Cost Sharing” (03/04) at
http://www.GAO.gov/new.items/d04491.pdf . But since then, many
states have further increased cost-sharing, premiums and/or co-pays.
See
www.kff.org/medicaidbenefits for states’ 2003-04 coverage of
chiropractors, podiatry, adult dentistry, dentures, orthodonture,
eyeglasses, optometry, hearing aids, audiologists, psychologists,
prosthetics, medical equipment, hospices, rehabilitation and physical,
occupational, speech & other therapy, which many states later cut in
2004-05.
See “Outline on State Medicaid
Cutbacks & Responsive Advocacy” at
www.healthlaw.org for legal rules states must meet to make cuts &
legal arguments to oppose them. Guides & policy arguments for opposing
state cuts appear at www.familiesusa.org
, www.cbpp.org ,
www.communitycatalyst.org &
www.TAEP.org .
See “ADAP Watch” at
www.NASTAD.org for details on state
ADAP waiting lists, cost containment stopgaps & a list of state ADAP &
Ryan White Program websites, which---with some hunting-- offer detailed
state eligibility data. The “National ADAP Monitoring Project 2005
Annual Report: Executive Summary”, Table 1, pp.18-20, at
www.kff.org much more conveniently lists
all state ADAP income levels (almost all have
asset levels too & where they do, they are at least as high as
Medicaid’s; but they are not listed here), any patient cost-sharing
rules & any medical criteria or prior authorization needed for special
or expensive drugs; state ADAP formularies appear in an adjacent
document.
See “Waiver Watch” at
www.healthlaw.org for news & details on state waivers & proposed
waivers.
Email
tomxix@ix.netcom.com for alternate state budget savings
methods that don’t cut eligibility or benefits
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