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Alabama--has
no spend down; an aged/disabled level of only $637/mo (the
SSI rate), a working parent level of only 26% (2007) & an ADAP level of
250%; covers only 12 MD visits & hospital days/yr & 4 brand Rx’s/mo; and
has an ADAP “enrollment cap”. The budget is
short $784 million, so Gov. Riley (R) asked the legislature (D) to cut
CHIP $7.3 million & ADAP $5 million; reduce home care benefits & maybe
even close CHIP to new patients. The risk pool has no
low income premium discount or Medicare supplement.
AL Blue Cross’ Child Caring plan insures 10,000
needy children who are “too rich” for CHIP
Alaska---this Title XVI state has no spend down; has an
aged/disabled level of about $999 (its SSI/SSP rate), a working parent
level of 81% (2007) & an ADAP level of 300%;
it tightened HCB & home care medical qualification rules; has a risk
pool with a Medicare supplement but no low
income premium discount; created a token SPAP for those under 175%
that excludes
the disabled; and added coverage of some adult dentistry. Gov.
Palin & the legislature (both R) raised the CHIP level---but only to
175% of the 2007 FPL.
Arizona—has no
spend down & no risk pool. It covers all parents under
200% & all childless (even non-disabled) adults under
100% & has an ADAP level of 300%.
The
legislature (R) considered cutting the 200% CHIP level to
175% & increased eligibility red tape for some adults, .but
gives Gov. Napolitano (D) funds, at least for now, to pay Pt. D co-pays
for dual eligibles. The budget is short $1.9
billion.
Arkansas---has
an aged/disabled level of $637/mo (the SSI rate), a working parent level
of 18% (2007), an ADAP level of 500% & a monthly numerical Rx limit. A
waiver funds insurance for small firm workers under 200%. Gov. Beebe &
the legislature (both D) raised DDS fees & covered most adult dentistry;
and are considering raising the CHIP level from
200% to 300%. The risk pool has no low income
premium discount or Medicare supplement.
There’s a budget shortfall.
Colorado---has
no spend down. The old GOP legislature weakened insurance
benefits minimums & promoted health savings accounts (HSAs) in private
plans, but referendum-voted tobacco taxes boosted the CHIP level to
200%, opened 600 more HCB & Katie Beckett waiver slots & raised the
working parent level to 66% (2007). The aged level is about $662 (the
SSI/SSP rate only for those over age 60) & a
mere $637/mo (the SSI rate) for the younger disabled. The ADAP level is
400%. The Denver Medical Center & the Univ. of Colorado Hospital cut
their indigent care programs; and they & the state Indigent Care
plan (for the childless poor awaiting SSA disability awards) boosted
their co-pays. The state raised the risk pool’s low income
premium discount income level to $50,000 & added a Medicare supplement
to it; raised provider fees $28 million; told the Medicaid agency to
adopt a consumer-run board’s care plan for the disabled; and got the
Kaiser health plan to spend $2.5 million more to subsidize its poorer
subscribers’ co-pays. Gov. Ritter (D) adopted a formulary & joined a
multi-state Rx buyer pool; and signed bills to create an Rx discount
plan for those under 300% & make private plans cover PTSD, anorexia,
substance abuse & colorectal cancer screening. A reform panel proposed
raising the parent level (and maybe later other adults’ too) to 205% &
CHIP’s to 250%; and premium subsidies for others under 400% (cost: $1.3
billion); but Ritter opposes new taxes.
See
www.colorado.gov/208commission The legislature (now D) later did
raise the CHIP level to 225% & widened its mental health benefit; and
the Senate pledged to cover all children by 2010 (cost: $200 million).
GOP legislators called for spending $8.6 million more to cut a DD
services waiting list of 4,000. The Denver Med. Center system, spending
half its budget on free indigent care, is short $16-$75 million.
Commonwealth
of the Northern Marianas—federal law caps its
matching rate far below what states get & it can’t even fully fund
its own share of Medicaid costs even though 37% of residents
are poor enough for Medicaid. Low fees attract far too few providers
(mostly only public clinics). The territory did enroll some off-island
specialists, but only by agreeing to pay them Hawaii’s higher Medicaid
rates. Its biggest hospital has a $32 million deficit due to its low
Medicaid fees.
Connecticut—a
209(b) state; its aged/disabled level is about $805 (its SSI/SSP rate),
its parent level is 185% & its ADAP level is 400%; its risk pool
has a low income premium discount for those under 200% but
no Medicare supplement. Gov. Rell (R) added MD visit co-pays;
raised premiums, co-pays & asset levels for the SPAP (its income levels
are $22,300 for 1 & $30,100 for 2); ended adult chiropractor,
naturopath, psychologist, occupational, physical & speech therapy
coverage; but seeks to add hospice services for non-Medicare patients.
The legislature (D) covered the working disabled & “ex-disabled”; raised
the CHIP level from 300% to 400% (but CMS’ new cap is 250% & Rell wants
to enroll its patients in HMOs); added low income clinic & hospital
“hardship” funds; raised fees to Medicare’s rate (DDS fees remain too
low); and made private plans let children stay covered to age 26. A
dispute on file & data access caused 3 HMOs to drop state contracts,
leaving many patients with access problems. Rell vetoed the
legislature’s bill to let towns, cities, non-profits & small firms join
the state worker health plan;
moved to cut AIDS services $400,000 & the SPAP
$2.8 million; but,
despite calls for a delay to shore up CHIP first,
CT began subsidizing insurance for adults under 300%.
(Its co-pays & premiums are too high, its psychiatric care is too
limited; its cap on Rx & equipment costs is too low &
its low fees are deterring provider sign-ups).
A bill to drop QMB’s asset test & raise
its income level to 220%--and thus qualify SPAP clients for full
Pt. D Extra Help--died as the last
legislature adjourned, but will be
re-filed next session.
There’s a state budget deficit.
Delaware---has
no spend down or risk pool; covers all (even
childless & non-disabled) adults under 100%, & has an ADAP level of
500%, a CHIP level of 200% & a SPAP level of 200%. Gov. Minner (D) & the
legislature (D Sen; R House) started a cancer care program for those
under 650% & a state health plan for others under 200%. She
once proposed to cover CHIP parents,
raised provider fees & covered the working disabled.
The state expects a shortfall.
District of Columbia---has
no risk pool. Income levels
are 200% for parents, 100% for the childless aged & disabled,
300% for CHIP (yet CMS’ cap is now 250%) & 400% for ADAP. DC’s own local
non-federal health program covers all others under 200%. Mayor Fenty &
the Council (both D) covered adult dentistry; raised
substance abuse funding & dental fees (but overall provider rates are
still too low); raised the aged/ disabled asset level $2,000 & the QMB
income level to 300% (thus qualifying many more Medicare patients for Pt
D’s full Extra Help); now seek
CMS approval to drop QMB’s asset test; and are also considering
subsidized insurance for those under 200-300% & sought to
partially fund it with a $5 million Blue Cross/Blue Shield donation.
When BC/BS didn’t make such a gift under its legal charity giving
obligation, DC sued it to enforce more gifts under the rule. A
consultant study urged DC to spend $90 million in tobacco funds on
expansion & upgrades (www.rand.org/research_areas/health
). There’s a deficit & 4 audits cite
millions in misspending.
Florida---Some
years ago the state got a waiver to privatize Medicaid and move it,
using premium support, managed care & HSAs, toward pilot “defined
contribution” plans. GAO questioned the quality of Medicaid HMO care & a
class action suit was filed against the waiver’s pilot HMO programs. The
under-funded risk pool is closed to new
patients (yet it has a Medicare supplement but no
low income premium discount). The state cut the aged/disabled
level from 88% to the $637/mo SSI rate,
but grandfathered-in those under 88% who are in HCB care or aren’t on
Medicare. The working parent level is
only 58% (2007) & the ADAP level is 300%. The state covers dentures (but
little other adult dentistry) & hearing aids. Providers are suing
to raise low fees. Gov. Crist (R) vetoed a bill mandating use of brand
name transplant Rx’s; signed bills to cut $233 million from Medicaid
(and $164 million from nursing homes) to meet a
$3.4 billion deficit & make
private plans cover autism care; started
an Rx discount plan; cut HMO fees $60 million &
dropped Zyprexa from the formulary. He proposed more outreach,
funding 14 local primary care programs & letting children over CHIP’s
200% level buy into it at full-cost. The legislature (R) passed bills to
make private plans let children stay covered to 30;
gut the insurance minimum benefits law; sponsor cheap, private,
barebones adult insurance;
drop hospice & cut dialysis care; deny nursing home fee raises;
offer hospitals a $66 million cushion;
cut some mental health funding; reduce certain MD fees; force more
patients into HMOs and cut Medicaid $803 million more. See
www.hpi.georgetown.edu/floridamedicaid on the waiver &“Is the
Medicaid Reform Experiment Saving Florida Money?” at
www.floridachain.org . . See an analysis of waiver & insurance
reform inadequacies in “New…Florida Health Plans…” at
www.cbpp.org .
Georgia---has
no risk pool. Its aged/disabled level is only $637/mo (the
SSI rate), its working parent level is only 53% (2007), its ADAP level
is 300% & its CHIP level is 235%. It has a monthly numerical limit on
Rx’s; ended CHIP dental surgery coverage; cut its pregnant woman level
to 200%; raised CHIP premiums; ended coverage of adult emergency
dentistry & artificial limbs & nursing home spend downs; and tightened
Katie Beckett waiver admission rules. Gov. Perdue & the legislature
(both R) plan to raise co-pays & foster HSAs and enrolled most patients
in managed care (but allow opt outs, due to many consumer & provider
complaints); and ended 90 day suspensions for late CHIP premiums.
Provider fees are too low & added eligibility red tape cut the rolls
60,000 in 2006. Atlanta’s safety net Grady Hospital is short up to $490
million & Savannah’s safety net Memorial Health Univ. Hosp. is short $30
million--both due to indigent care. The state found $58 million to
subsidize GA hospitals’ trauma care—even with a
$200-$300 million state deficit. Perdue sought $55 million more
to raise providers’ fees (which they say are still too
low); and signed a bill to subsidize insurance for certain low wage
small firm workers. Firms & workers will each pay discounted premiums---which
critics say are still unaffordably high---for a “basic”,
high deductible plan requiring patients to make HSA deposits. See
“New Georgia..Health Plans…” at
www.cbpp.org on details & inadequacies of the health expansion &
insurance reforms. .
Guam—this
territory’s matching funds are capped by law far below what states get.
Its non-federal medically indigent plan (MIP) pays even less than
Medicaid & attracts almost no private providers. Scanty funds for
off-island specialty care, and air transport to it, get used up quickly;
and the legislature may ask CMS to let its Medicaid & even Medicare
patients use providers in the Philippines. Provider fees are paid too
low & too late; and only 1
dentist accepts any Guam patients.
Hawaii—a
209(b) state with no risk pool; a waiver covers all
non-Medicare adults below 200%, but childless aged & disabled must be
under 100% & the ADAP level is 400%. The state makes all employers
insure employees & dependents and
created a token SPAP for aged & disabled patients under
100%. Gov. Lingle (R) & the legislature (D) raised the CHIP (to 300%,
but CMS’ cap is 250%) & parent (to 250%) levels; cut CHIP premiums & let
“over-income” children get it for full-price premiums; restored some
adult dentistry; expanded substance abuse care; and found $8 million to
raise MD fees in 2009. Public hospitals are short $49 million due to low
Medicaid fees & they asked the state for $25+ million. Advocates
question state plans to give an HMO contract to an inexperienced
Mainland firm with no HI provider network
Idaho---a
Title XVI state, with no spend down; an aged/disabled
level of only about $669 (the SSI/SSP rate) , a working parent level of
only 42% (2007); an ADAP level of 200%; and a risk pool with no
Medicare supplement nor low income premium discount
(though adding one is being considered).
The GOP legislature raised the CHIP level from 150% to 185%; subsidized
a pilot health plan for low income adults & small firm workers (but it
has a big, unused surplus & is under-subscribed); covered
the working disabled; and got CMS approval to have 3 patient classes:
Parents & children; the disabled & chronically ill; and the aged--who
may later get differing benefits, higher co-pays but also more
preventive care. Gov. Otter
(R) covered adult dentistry, piggybacking on
private dental plans’ provider
networks to enhance access.
Illinois---this
209(b) state’s aged/disabled level is 100% but
its main SPAP excludes the disabled, who get only a
limited formulary from a 2nd,SPAP (both have 200%
levels). Gov. Blagjoevich & the legislature (both D) added HIV drugs to
the latter’s formulary (only for Medicare patients);
and he & the Senate are expected to agree by
November to some form of a House-passed bill to give all
disabled full, equal benefits in the main SPAP.
They raised the parent level to 185%, set the ADAP level at 400%, agreed
to a court order to raise pediatric fees (but
other provider fees are still too low & paid very
late: the bill backlog is $1.5 billion), subsidized insurance for
veterans left uncovered by VA cuts, raised the CHIP level; & enrolled
4,000 more MDs to treat children. The under-funded risk pool, often
closed to new patients, has a Medicare supplement but
no low income premium discount. Blagjoevich first proposed
raising the parent level to 300% & CHIP’s to 400% (but CMS’ cap is now
250%), keeping it at just 100% for the childless aged/disabled (but now
also even for non-disabled adults) &
subsidized insurance (funded by business taxes & a play-or-pay rule) for
others under 400%. The Cook Co. Hosp. system is short $150 million--
forcing service cuts, facility closures, denial of free care to needy
suburbanites & imposition of Rx co-pays. The Governor later scaled back
his plan--with only a 3% play-or-pay “fee”; no new
business taxes; fully subsidizing only those under
100%; with lower subsidies & more
cost-sharing for those over 100%; and subsidies only
up to 300%. When the legislature ignored this 2nd
plan too, he unilaterally shifted $500 million from budget “pork” to
fund it & began enrolling patients in
it. But advocates had to lobby for a fix-it bill to cover childless,
non-disabled adults too, since the Governor’s own 2nd
plan---which he says costs only $20 million a year & is paid for by $34
million saved by his PCCM & chronic care programs—covers only adults who
are parents so far. A legislative panel voted twice to kill the plan;
a state court barred further enrollment (Blagjoevich
obeyed, but is appealing); and the deficit is
$395-$750 million. He has resisted forcing clients into HMOs (so
far, it’s been voluntary), raised the working disabled level to 350% &
required that Medigap policies be sold to the disabled as cheaply as the
costliest aged policies. Local & Senate leaders proposed a Cook Co.
Hosp. rescue plan that could require more county taxes. The Governor
will sign a bill to give $640 million/yr to hospitals with big Medicaid
caseloads (including $51 million/yr for Cook Co’s. Hosp. system).
Indiana---this
209(b) state’s token SPAP for those under 150%
excludes the disabled; and it
has a much-stricter-than-SSI “209(b)” Medicaid
disability rule (one must be fatally or
incurably ill). Gov. Daniels (R) & the
then-all-GOP legislature raised CHIP premiums &
adopted a waiting list for ADAP (which has a 300% level), but did
let Medicare patients enroll in the risk pool (which now has a low
income premium discount) for secondary coverage.
The ACLU filed suit against a once-every-6-years denture &
relinings limit. A Medicaid eligibility
privatization in 12 of the 92 counties left 4,000 fewer clients
eligible, even as the total statewide caseload grew; so more &
more House (now D) members oppose the contract. The state
tightened its lax spend down (but a court reinstated 12,606 clients
dropped without hearing rights); and will raise
MD fees 25%. The legislature passed
bills to raise CHIP’s level from 200% to 300% (which CMS then
capped at 250%) & subsidize insurance for
adults below 200% (even up to 37,000 childless ones,
but not
Medicare patients; since the aged/ disabled
level—now under $620/mo, the US’ 2nd lowest---won’t
rise). The insurance has HMOs,
HSAs, preventive care, few co-pays but no dental or vision care.
Patients must put 2%-4% of income into HSAs. See
http://www.cbpp.org/1-24-08health.htm
, “Healthy Indiana Plan.” at
www.kff.org & “Profiles in ..State
Coverage: Healthy Indiana Plan..” at
www.statecoverage.net for more.
“Richer” adults under 65, if uninsured 6+
months, can now buy in at full cost. A reform board urged an
insurance mandate, an employer play-or-pay law &, more coverage
subsidies.
The state expects a shortfall.
Iowa---a
waiver covers up to 30,000 non-Medicare adults—even if childless or
non-disabled—under 200% for care at 2 public hospitals (with Rx’s
dispensed only at their pharmacies). The regular
aged/disabled level is only $637/mo (the SSI rate), the working parent
level is 89% (2007) & the ADAP level is 200%. The risk pool has
a Medicare supplement but no low income premium discount.
Gov. Culver & the legislature (both D) chose a health study board that
proposed—and the legislature is expected to favor---a mandate to insure
all children & a plan to cover all adults publicly or privately by
2012.. The deficit is $350 million.
Hospital, MD & DDS fees are too low.
Culver made insurance reforms & signed bills making private plans let
children stay covered until age 25, covering disabled children through
the FOA (but
only up to
300%) and raising the CHIP level from
200% to 300% (over CMS’ new 250% cap).
Kansas---a
Title XVI state with an aged/disabled level of only $637/mo (the SSI
rate), a working parent level of 34% (2007) & an ADAP level of 300%.
The GOP legislature passed a bill promoting HSAs & raised provider
fees to 65%-83% of Medicare rates. Blue Cross & a foundation subsidize
insurance for KC-area families under $30,000. The risk pool has no
low income premium discount or Medicare supplement.
Gov. Sibelius (D) covered the working disabled, ”ex- disabled” & some
“pre-disabled”; and signed bills to extend
Medicaid (by 2009 to parents under
50% & by 2012 to all
adults under 100%) & study insurance
subsidies for those under 200%. The state
raised the CHIP level from 200% to 225% by 2009 & to 250% by 2010.
There’s a $55
million shortfall & the Senate voted to void the parent level increases
Kentucky---
has an aged/disabled level of only $637/mo (the SSI rate), a working
parent level of only 64% (2007) & an ADAP level of 300%. Ex-Gov.
Fletcher (R) & the legislature (R Senate; D House) dropped tough, yet
unworkable nursing home & HCB medical admission rules. CMS approved a
cap of 4-Rx’s-a-month, limits on occupational /physical/speech therapy
visits, x-rays & MRIs; and higher co-pays. The state set up 4 Medicaid
groups: “healthy” adults; children; the aged & disabled; and MR & DD
patients--with different benefits & more cost-sharing: See
http://www.kff.org/7530.cfm .
The state started shifting 2,500 disabled into HCB care; and raised
child DDS fees (but overall provider rates are still too
low). The risk pool has no low income premium discounts
or Medicare supplement. Gov. Brashear (D) faces
a $266 million deficit & expects added
Medicaid costs of $112 million in 2008, $147.9 million in 2009 & $242.5
million in 2010.
Louisiana---has
an aged/disabled level of only $637/mo (the SSI rate), a working parent
level of only 20% (2007) & an ADAP level of 200% It cut covered Rx’s to
8 monthly (over-ride-able by MDs). Its risk pool has no
low income discount or Medicare supplement. The
legislature (D) raised CHIP’s 250% level to 300% (but CMS’ new cap is
250%); sought a waiver to cover parents in New Orleans & Lake Charles &
maybe later even childless adults; and voted to seek federal funds for a
new safety net hospital in N.O. to replace its destroyed State Charity
Hosp.---to which Gov. Jindal (R) agreed. He
signed a Medicaid budget $50+ million below projected costs (so later it
may require supplemental funds or provider fee cuts);
agreed to spend $10 million more on CHIP; is
negotiating with HHS to try to get an alleged $600 million overpayment
to the state written off; and is
considering an insurance mandate for those who can afford premiums and
a business group’s plan to divert ½ of DSH--and
even some Charity Hospital ---funds to
subsidize private
insurance for non-Medicare (even childless &
non-disabled) adults below 200%, at first in N.O. & Lake Charles. The
Sec. of Health named a new reform panel &
began moving patients into HMOs.
The Charity Hosp. system is short $35 million
Maine---Gov.
Balducci & the legislature (both D) subsidize “Dirigo” insurance for
those under 300% (yet premiums were at first too high & the plan was
under-funded & under-enrolled in) and raised the childless adult
Medicaid level to 100% (but new non-disabled,
non-aged applicants are excluded) & for parents to 200%; have an
ADAP level of 500% a CHIP level of 200% & SPAP levels of
$1,604/mo for 1 & $2,159/mo for 2 and
give O/P waiver coverage to HIV+ (even “pre-disabled”) patients under
250%. There’s no risk pool. Balducci sought mental health
fee “standardization”, having patients get primary MDs,
an employer “play or pay” rule, reforming hospital funding &
starting risk pool & reinsurance plans.
Dental fees are too low & paid too late &
adult dentistry is limited (but dentures
are covered). The MSP programs
have no asset tests & the QMB level is 150%, SLMB’s is 170% & QI’s is
185%. With a $124 million deficit,
Baldacci sought to raise cost-sharing for those over 150%, & cut
podiatry care and did impose $25 premiums on “richer”
patients & tighter Rx U/R controls for the childless non-aged,
non-disabled. He signed bills
raising alcohol, soda & insurance taxes to shore up the Dirigo plan--but
a business group got enough signatures to force a referendum to repeal
the beverage taxes
Maryland---has
an aged/disabled level of only $637/mo (the SSI rate), a
parent level of 116%, a CHIP level of 300% (yet CMS now has a
250% limit) & an ADAP level of 500%. The AARP & Legal Aid got a court
order to widen strict ICF & HCB medical admission rules & administrative
appeals. A waiver merged the main SPAP with a state O/P clinic program
into one for all non-Medicare adults (even childless &
non-disabled) under 116%. A new law allows the
state-sponsored, Blue Cross-run 2nd SPAP (which previously
only partially subsidized Pt. D premiums for the aged under 300%) to now
also cover some of their donut hole costs, but
it still excludes the disabled.
A 2005 waiver proposal to offer any low income uninsured
person Rx discounts (up to 40%) still awaits CMS approval.
Provider fees are too low. One child’s untreated tooth infection spread
to his brain & killed him, so UnitedHealth funded an indigent child
treatment program at the state dental school. The risk pool has
low income premium discounts for those under 200% but no
Medicare supplement; and the state covers the working disabled. In 2005
a state insurance board let small firm health plans with 500,000
subscribers cut Rx coverage. Gov. O’Malley & the legislature (both D)
made private plans let children stay covered dependents to age 26;
raised the income level to 116% for full Medicaid, first
for parents starting 7/1/08 –and,
only via a later phase-in,
for
childless adults too, hopefully in 2009--
if a slots referendum passes & raises enough funds; voted
$30 million/yr to subsidize insurance for low paid small firm workers;
and gave $50 million to Prince Georges Co. Hosp.(it’s short $300 million
since 1/2 its patients get free indigent care). O’Malley & a legislative
budget panel later cut Medicaid $40 million; but began to fund a $42
million child dental fee raise (which will
triple many pediatric DDS fees).
Massachusetts---has
no risk pool. Ex-Gov. Romney (R) signed the legislature’s
(D) bill to expand Medicaid; require everyone to have insurance;
subsidize it for small employers & workers under 300%; raise the CHIP
level from 200% to 300% (above CMS’ new 250% limit); and raise the
parents’—but not the childless aged (now 100%) & disabled
(now 133%) –Medicaid level to 200%. The ADAP level is 488% & the SPAP’s
is 188%. Gov. Patrick (D) cut the poor’s cost-sharing & dropped
deductibles for “Free Care” patients under 200%. Sign-ups of 300,000+
for subsidized coverage helped cause
a $1.2 billion deficit, so the state raised plan premiums &
cost-sharing & Patrick to ask for more revenue several times to pay
rising costs. See “On the Road to Universal… ”at
www.urban.org for a new analysis of the heath reforms.
Advocates seek to widen the private plan
minimum benefits law to cover more mental health care,
which business groups oppose (for savings, they urge forcing all
Medicaid patients into HMOs).
Patrick seeks $33 million
more from business while the House voted to get another $89 million from
state funds and insurance & provider assessments.
Michigan---has
no risk pool; an aged/disabled level of 100%, a working
parent level of only 61% (2007), a CHIP level of 200% & an ADAP level of
450%. It ended most adult dental, hearing aid, podiatry & chiropractic
care and stopped enrolling childless non-disabled adults under 100% into
its O/P care-only waiver. Gov. Granholm (D) & the then-all-GOP
legislature added cost sharing --but restored adult dentistry; and
raised fees for children’s dental & wellness and adult preventive care.
Genesee (Flint), Ingram (Lansing), Muskegon & Wayne (Detroit) Counties
subsidize coverage for workers under 200%. With a $1.7 billion deficit,
Granholm & the legislature (R-Sen; D-House) passed big tax increases &
big cuts, but there’s still a $472
million shortfall. Signature-gathering failed for calling a
referendum to cover all residents. The legislature was once considering
a risk pool, while the GOP
Senate has voted to deny Medicaid to 19- & 20-yr-olds.
Minnesota---this
209(b) state has an aged/disabled level of about 100%, a CHIP level of
275%, an ADAP level of 300% and a risk pool with low
income premium discounts for those under 200% & a Medicare supplement.
It raised premiums & co-pays for Medicaid, CHIP & Minnesota Care
(subsidized insurance for non-Medicare parents under 275%), cut the
latter’s income levels and denied Medicaid & CHIP to legal
aliens. The state ADAP imposed premiums on clients over 100%.
Gov. Pawlenty (R) funded an Rx discount plan for uninsured & Pt D
donut hole patients; and covered the working disabled, “ex-disabled” &
some “pre-disabled”. The legislature (D) raised the mental health
budget $34 million & forbade hospitals from pre-screening patients for
delinquent medical debt. After a study
panel offered a reform plan, Pawlenty agreed to
raise the childless non-Medicare adult MinnesotaCare level to 250% & cut
its premiums. With a $935 million
deficit, the state cut hospital---but
not LTC—rates by
$90 million & capped enrollment in HCB care for the disabled.
Mississippi---has
no spend down; its risk pool has no low
income premium discounts & no Medicare supplement. Gov.
Barbour (R) cut the aged/disabled level from $1,000+ to $637/mo (the SSI
rate). There’s a working parent level of 32% (2007), a CHIP level of
200% & an ADAP level of 400%. Rx’s are limited to 2 brand
names + 3 generics monthly (HIV patients get 5
brand Rx’s & there’s a suit against the rules). Barbour
cut Rx dispensing fees & physical, speech
& occupational therapy benefits. An in-person re-application rule
inhibits coverage, but Barbour & the Senate (R) won’t drop it (except
maybe for LTC & housebound patients).
Medicaid needs $86-90 million more in 2008—plus
$168-268 million in 2009 (extra federal Katrina funds are now
exhausted). Barbour & the Senate (both R)
threaten to cut Medicaid $365 million
(but dropped threats to slash provider fees)
if their hospital-revenue tax plan isn’t passed;
but the House (D) majority instead favors
higher alcohol & tobacco taxes & a small hospital bed tax
(both of which Barbour says he’d
veto).
Missouri---a
209(b) state; its risk pool has no Medicare supplement but
has a low income premium discount. Gov. Blunt & the legislature (both R)
cut the aged/disabled level from 100% to 85%; ended state medical aid
for the poor awaiting SSA disability awards; stopped covering the
working disabled; cut the working parent level to 39% (2007); kept ADAP
& CHIP levels of 300%; ended adult dental, podiatry, hearing aid &
vision benefits (a court voided some DME cuts); raised CHIP premiums &
made 46,000 more children pay them; denied CHIP to those with
“affordable” job coverage (but exempted those whose job plans cost over
5% of income, have preexisting condition barriers or exhaust covered
benefits); ended CHIP co-pays; raised nursing homes fees; restored
wheelchair supplies coverage; and expanded the SPAP (its
income level is 150%) to also cover the disabled on Medicare.
Blue Cross & a foundation subsidize insurance for KC-area
families under $30,000. Blunt’s 2005-06 legislation gives patients
health assessments, primary MDs & care plans; allows insurance subsidy
pilot plans for adults under 185% in 2 counties; raises & more strictly
enforces non-ER co-pays; uses “premium support” to merely pay client job
plan premiums rather than just let Medicaid be secondary payer; covers
foster children until 21; raises MD fees
to 62.5% of Medicare rates (Public Citizen said MO fees are the US’ 4th
lowest); restores hospice care & some working disabled coverage
(yet excludes all but the very
poorest); offers birth control & screening to women under 185%;
restores adult vision (but which the GOP
legislature later denied to the aged in nursing homes), hearing
aid & podiatry coverage; kept denying dentistry
to all adults; and lets the aged & disabled opt out
of HMOs. A court ordered the state to expand notice & hearing rights
before CHIP terminations; and the state allows presumptive enrollment
of children by low income clinics. Blunt later proposed to subsidize
insurance for parents & even childless, non-Medicare adults under
185%-200%, with no premium & low cost-sharing; and to subsidize
catastrophic insurance for small firm workers under 250-300%. But once
he dropped re-election plans, even GOP legislators lost interest in his
plan. The Senate
(R) voted for a 225% level for all
uninsured non-Medicare adults--with
more cost-sharing & requiring all but the
poorest patients to put up to $1,000/yr into HSAs. Democrats
instead want to restore prior aged/disabled (100%) & parent (75%)
levels, plus adult dental coverage, and
let over-income children get CHIP at full
price—all at a net state cost of $265 million/yr.
The Sec of State authorized signature-gathering for a referendum to void
the Medicaid cuts & raise all its eligibility levels to
200%. The state is replacing 484 workers for 20,000 mentally
disabled with cheaper private ones.
Montana---its
aged/disabled level is only $637/mo (the SSI rate), its working parent
level is only 60% (2007), its ADAP level is 330% and its risk pool has
both low income premium discounts (for those under 150%) &
a Medicare supplement. The state raised cost-sharing, cut LTC & hospice
benefits & access and aged & disabled MD visits to 10 yearly. Gov.
Schweitzer (D) & the legislature (D-Senate; R-House) ended a CHIP
waiting list (but now has a short one & other
cost containment measures for ADAP); seek a waiver to cover 3,000
more adults; raised Medicaid’s family asset level; started a token SPAP
for all Medicare patients under 200%;
raised the CHIP level from 150% to 175%; expanded CHIP dental &
preventive care; and made private plans offer vaccines & well-child care
to age 7 & let children stay covered to age 25.
An 11/08 referendum was slated
on spending $20 million to raise the CHIP level to 250% & liberalize
child Medicaid.
Nebraska---is
a Title XVI state with a one-house “non-partisan” legislature. Its
aged/disabled level is 100%, its working parent level is 58% (2007), its
CHIP level is 185% & its ADAP level is 200%. It dropped many
welfare-to-work clients & adopted a formulary. The risk pool has
a Medicare supplement but no low income premium discount.
Gov. Heineman (R) covered Pt. D co-pays for HCB and board & care
clients, but he plans to cut dental care to $1,000/yr, hearing aids to 1 per 4/yrs,
eyeglasses to 1 per 2/yrs, and adults to 12 chiropractic visits and 60
sessions of occupational, speech & physical therapy per year. A
study board proposed to make Medicaid a “defined contribution” plan &
increase use of home care.
Nevada---a
Title XVI state with no spend down & no risk
pool; its disabled level is $637/mo (the SSI rate); the aged-only level
is about $673.40 (their SSI/SSP rate), its working parent level is 59%
(2007) & its ADAP level is 400%. It covers the working disabled;
added coverage of all the disabled to its SPAP
(with a 225% income level); added some
adult dental & vision care; rejected adding Medicaid co-pays; set up a
reform study board; but raised CHIP premiums. Gov. Gibbons (R) & the
legislature (D-House; R-Sen.) dropped an extra “unearned income“ cap for
the working disabled but a
$1.2 billion deficit forced them to close CHIP enrollment, cut pregnancy
care & cancel a $17 million provider fee increase
New Hampshire---a
209(b) state with a risk pool with no Medicare supplement
& no low income premium discount. Its aged/disabled level
is about $664 (the SSI/SSP rate), its working parent level is 55%
(2007), its CHIP level is 300% & its ADAP level is 300%.
The state has a much-stricter-than-SSI “209(b)”
Medicaid disability rule (inability to work for 4+ years);
doesn’t cover hospices & despite a 65% raise still pays low fees.
Gov. Lynch & the legislature (both D) shifted some state LTC costs to
counties (which they filed a suit against) & ended a DD care waiting
list. There’s a $200 million deficit & the state cut health programs $22 million.
Lynch wants to make private plans let children stay covered to age 26.
New Jersey---has
no risk pool, an aged/disabled level of 100%; a parent
level of 133%; an ADAP level of 500%, SPAP levels of $31,850 for 1 &
$36,791 for 2 and a waiver covering other adults (even childless &
non-disabled) under 100%. Gov. Corzine
signed the legislature’s (both D) bills to mandate coverage of all
children, raise the parent level to 200% & make private insurance more
affordable. Public Citizen said NJ provider fees were the US’
very lowest, so the state tripled many pediatric rates. One audit
questions $52 million in school health costs & a 2nd said
state-subsidized hospital patient indigency programs lose millions to
fraud & not seeking out other coverage.
Blue Cross now offers very cheap CHIP-like private insurance to children
over the 350% CHIP level (which CMS approved years ago).With
a $3.5 billion deficit, Corzine & the legislature
cut hospital charity funding $111 million, required $2 Rx co-pays
(capped at $10/mo) &, $6 ER co-pays in Medicaid; raised SPAP co-pays;
and mandated proof of income & its verification to get Medicaid &
CHIP
New Mexico—has
no spend down, but has a risk pool with a
Medicare supplement & low income premium discounts for those under 200%.
Its aged/disabled level is only $637/mo (the SSI rate), its working
parent level is 63% (2007), its CHIP level is 235% & its ADAP level is
400%. A waiver funds insurance for small firm workers under 200%. Gov.
Richardson & the legislature (both D) raised the child & pregnant woman
level to 235%; but awarded mental health care management to a firm
that’s s said to cut access & benefits. Low fees reduce access to
providers. Richardson proposed (see his pages at
www.newmexico.gov ) a
semi-“universal” mandate; insurance reforms;
raising the subsidized insurance level to 300% or 400% & widening access
to it; giving Medicaid to all--even childless &
non-disabled--adults under 200%; a 300% CHIP level (above CMS’
new 250% cap); integrating IHS care more with other plans; and
even making all providers take state
patients---costing $75 million over 5 years
&
phased in 2009-13 if & as funds allow.
The legislature voted only for a 2nd panel to
again study health reform, but
Richardson & its leaders plan a special session later in
2008 to re-visit expansion.
New York---has
no risk pool. A “Family Health” waiver offers managed care
(with no LTC benefits) to parents under 150% & all childless (even
non-disabled) adults under 65 below 100%. The childless aged
level is only $725/mo & ADAP’s is 431%. The state subsidizes insurance
for workers under 250%, but caps its Rx benefit
at $3,000/yr. The legislature (D
House; R Sen.) excludes the
disabled from the SPAP (with a 350%+ level); won’t cover digital
mammo-grams; raised Rx & MD co-pays (but capped them at $200/yr);
adopted a flexible formulary; fosters assisted living, chore aide &
adult day care; makes counties pay 1/2 of state Medicaid costs (but caps
their yearly increases at 3.5%); let providers deny services to those
who don’t meet co-pays; funded HIV day health care; covered colon &
prostate cancer patients under 250%; required hospital bill discounts
for those under 300% & forbade taking homes from debtors; and passed
mental health parity. Public Citizen said MD fees are the US’ 2nd
lowest. Ex-Gov. Spitzer (D) raised the CHIP level from 250% to 400%
(above CMS’ new 250% cap); let small firms that can’t afford insurance
buy into FamilyHealth at low rates; and began plans to cover ½ the
uninsured by 2012.
With a $4.9 billion deficit, he sought a
$1 billion Medicaid cut (i.e., lower hospital, LTC, home health & Rx
fees). Gov. Paterson (D) started an Rx discount
plan (with 30%-50% off) for the disabled & those over 50; raised
Medicaid & FamilyHealth asset levels ($13,050 for 1, $19,200 for 2,
etc); ended the QMB & SLMB asset tests (children’s & QI asset
tests were already dropped); is
considering mandatory managed care for HIV patients;
and signed a budget to protect health funding with an added $1.25-a-pack
cigarette tax.
North Carolina---has
no risk pool; covers the working disabled; and
raised covered Rx’s from 6 to 8 monthly (plus 3 or more via
exception).Its aged/disabled level is 100% & its working parent level is
52% (2007). It resurrected a SPAP– which
excludes the disabled—to subsidize Pt. D premiums for
those under 175% not on full Extra Help. The UNC Hosp.
eased its indigent care rules, but asks for up-front cash co-pays.
Provider fees are too low--and the Senate (D)
voted to cut them $42 million more. The state had
made counties pay 15% of Medicaid costs, but Gov. Easley & the
legislature (both D) will shift county costs to the state by 7/09. They
raised ADAP’s level to 250% & CHIP’s from 200% to 300% (over CMS’ new
250% cap), passed limited mental health parity & authorized a risk pool
which will exclude Medicare
patients.
North Dakota---this
209(b) state has a risk pool with a Medicare supplement
but no low income premium discount. Its aged/disabled
level is 100%, its working parent level is only 63% (2007) & its ADAP
level is 400%. A study by the GOP legislature urged a provider fee
raise. Gov. Hoeven (R) didn’t seek one, but signed a bill to use the FOA
to cover disabled children (but only up to 200%)
& raised the CHIP
net income level from 140% to 150% (but with very liberal
disregards).
Ohio--this
209(b) state with no risk pool cut the parent level from
100% to 90% & has a 500% ADAP level. It slashed adult dental funds 50%;
cut secondary fees for dual eligibles; herded most patients into HMOs
(some with no infectious disease specialists); slashed medical
assistance for 15,000 awaiting SSA disability awards ; let providers
turn away those who don’t meet co-pays; and passed mental health
parity--but kept
its aged/disabled level at only $534/mo (the US’s very
lowest !). Gov. Srtickland (D)
& the GOP legislature raised the CHIP level from 200% to
300% (CMS cut it to 250%), used the FOA to cover disabled children under
500% & covered foster children to 21. The legislature wouldn’t restore
the 100% parent level. Strickland got a waiver to cover assisted living
& let “over income” children purchase CHIP at full cost. The state cut
funds for county eligibility work even with an
case processing backlog of 200+ days & 16,000 clients; and an
audit said $400 million can be saved with a risk pool & reforming
nursing home rate-setting. A $1.3 billion
deficit got Strickland to delay spending $65 million to raise
hospital, MD & DDS fees & restore adult dentistry.
His health reform panel suggested Medicaid
levels of 200% for parents & 100% for all (even
non-disabled) childless adults (except
possibly Medicare patients), a universal
mandate & subsidized insurance for those under 300%--all
costing $1.5-$2 billion
Oklahoma---this
209(b) state has a risk pool with no Medicare supplement &
no low income premium discounts. It cut the aged/disabled
level from 100% to about $684 (the SSI/SSP rate). The working parent
level is 50% (2007) & its ADAP level is 200%. It ended the
parent/children spend down, has a “3-Rx’s-a-month” limit & doesn’t cover
hospices. Gov. Henry (D) covered the breast/cervical cancer & working
disabled groups, raised tobacco taxes enough to now subsidize insurance
for 10,000+ small firm workers/spouses under 200% & raised the CHIP
level from 185% to 300% (over CMS’ new 250% cap). The legislature
(R-House; even-split Sen.) plans to make Medicaid a defined contribution
plan; offer only premium support vs. full secondary
Medicaid if clients can get job coverage; foster HSAs; gut insurance
minimum benefit mandates; and promote primary & home care vs. ERs &
nursing homes. It raised many provider fees to the Medicare rate &
widened mental health care. There’s a $114
million budget deficit & the state ADAP had to adopt
cost-containments
Oregon---this
Title XVI state’s risk pool has no Medicare supplement but has
low income premium discounts for those under 185%. Its aged/disabled
level is only $637/mo (the SSI rate),
other levels are 100% for working
parents, 185% for CHIP & non-Medicare adults’ subsidized insurance &
200% for ADAP. An anti-tax referendum ended coverage for many adults,
ended spend downs (except for transplant & HIV patients), limited adult
dental & ended vision care & cut some HMO hospital days to 18/yr. The
Oregon Health Plan (OHP) Standard waiver---with limited benefits for
uninsured childless non-Medicare adults under 100%---is again taking
applications (but it only has enough funds to cover those applicants who
win a random lottery). The ADAP reportedly adopted some cost-sharing.
Gov. Kungoloski & the legislature (both D) created an Rx discount plan;
took the FOA option; raised some home care fees; and named study boards
to suggest health expansion plans by 2009 (yet a referendum to raise
tobacco taxes to expand CHIP lost in 11/07).
The Portland City Council began
to plan city-subsidized insurance for those poor children slightly “too
rich” for CHIP.
Pennsylvania---has
no risk pool, an aged/disabled level of 100%, its working
parent level is only 59% (2007), its CHIP level is 300% & its ADAP level
is 350%. It subsidizes “Adult Basic” insurance
(with no mental health or Rx benefits & a waiting list of
80,000) for non-Medicare adults under 200%, Its SPAP—with income
levels of $23,500 for 1 & $31,500 for 2--excludes
the disabled. Gov. Rendell (D) & the old all-GOP legislature cut
covered I/P stays to 2 & men’s MD visits to 18/yr; and covered the
working disabled & “ex-disabled”. Rendell’s 1st health
expansion proposal used more tobacco taxes & a 3% payroll tax to
subsidize insurance for those under 300%.
He then dropped the tax (to tap MD malpractice & auto accident
pool funds instead) but the Senate (still R) blocked this plan too. See
http://www.phlp.org/Website/alerts.asp
Rendell then sought to return HMO patients’ Rx benefits to direct state
control to bring in $95 million in rebates and to
liberalize SPAP & Medicaid Rx
access---yet still failed to seek
SPAP coverage of the disabled. The House
(now D) voted to end Adult Basic’s waiting list, have it cover Rx’s &
mental health, open it to those under300% whose employers help
pay premiums & those under 400% with too-high premiums and/or
pre-existing condition limits; but keep
its Medicare patient exclusion. But Senate GOP leaders oppose this too &
instead favor more low income clinic
subsidies, business tax credits for HSAs
& clinic donations,
making private plans let grown children
stay covered longer, applying COBRA to firms of under 20 and creating a
risk pool. Public Citizen says MD fees are the US’ 5th
lowest. There’s a budget
deficit.
Puerto Rico----federal
law caps its matching rate far below what states get. Its HIV care
manager denies that its ADAP---which has
an income level of 200%--has a waiting list.
Advocates dispute that and allege funding & management errors.
Rhode Island---has
no risk pool , an aged/disabled level of 100%,
a parent level just cut from 185% to
175%, a CHIP level of 250% & an ADAP
level of 400%. It covers the working disabled but
only those disabled
over 55 in its
limited-formulary SPAP (with income levels of $37,167 for 1 &
$42,476 for 2). Gov. Carcieri (R) signed bills to subsidize insurance
for low-paid small firm workers (it also guts the insurance mandated
benefits law); require free & discounted hospital care for those under
200% & 300%;and ban taking homes from hospital debtors. Public Citizen
says MD fees are the US’ 3rd lowest.
A $384 million shortfall got
Carcieri to seek a waiver with an extra lump sum federal payment to meet
the current deficit under which RI would have to divert 10% of nursing
home cases to cheaper home care—but only in
exchange for a future federal funding cap that could deny nursing home
care to all but the “highest need” patients, cut the parent level to
175% & raise premiums, and maybe require waiting lists. The legislature
(D) agreed to this (for which it & Carcieri must now find $67 million in
cuts just for 2009). It voted to raise co-pays for adult day care and
drop legal alien children & 7,400 adults. The Human
Services chief said deficits may even require dropping eyeglass benefits
& up to 40,000 more patients by 2010. See Medicaid data at
www.povertyinstitute.org ; email
lkatz@ric.edu for a waiver critique
South Carolina---has
no spend down. Its aged/disabled level is 100%, its parent
level is 50% (but it’s 100% for up to 2 yrs for parents leaving welfare
to work) & its ADAP level is 300%. Its risk pool has a
Medicare supplement but no low income premium discount.
Gov. Sanford & the legislature (both R) limited Rx’s to only 4/mo; added
ER, I/P & O/P hospital co-pays; offered 2 HSA plans in Columbia; are
moving patients into HMOs (but allowing opt-outs); and raised the CHIP
level to 200%. The SPAP has a 200% level
but it excludes
the disabled. Added state funds finally
ended a long ADAP waiting list.
There’s a $250 million deficit. Sanford proposed
a $22 million CHIP cut & saving $16 million by requiring more generics
use. The legislature failed to over-ride his veto of added tobacco taxes
to fund a 100% level for all parents & subsidize insurance for
workers under 200%;
but over-rode his veto of another CHIP eligibility liberalization
South Dakota---has
no spend down and a risk pool with no low income premium
discount that excludes Medicare patients. Its
aged/disabled level is only $637/mo (the SSI rate), its working parent
level is 56% (2007) & its ADAP level is 300%. A health study board
suggested some coverage expansions to Gov. Rounds & the legislature
(both R), but he said even raising the pregnant woman level to 200% &
CHIP’s to 250% is too costly (tobacco taxes were already raised once).
Tennessee----Gov.
Bredeson (D) & the legislature (D House; even split Senate) dropped
191,000 adults, but no children. The aged/disabled level is now $637/mo
(the SSI rate), the working parent level
is 80% (2007) & the ADAP level is 300%. Except for pregnant women,
children & HIV+ patients, MD visits were cut to 10 &, hospital days to
20 yearly; and Rx’s to 2 brand drugs + 3 generics/mo except HIV &
Hepatitis C drugs and for drugs to avert death or hospital stays. The
state raised the CHIP level to 250%; subsidizes
health insurance for small firm workers under 250%;
revived a risk pool (with no Medicare supplement, but
with a premium discount for those under 200%); and started a
SPAP to cover up to 5 Rx’s/mo for anyone under 250%.
Except for also covering insulin, diabetic items & more psychiatric
Rx’s, CHIP uses Medicaid Rx rules. CMS allowed only $115 million more
for DSH costs in a waiver renewal that also restores the spend down. Yet
Bredeson then cut spend down funds $80 million &
didn’t fund “safety net” benefits he promised the disabled who lost
Tenncare. The deficit is $468-$585
million, yet Tenncare has a $600 million
reserve that he refuses to touch.
Texas—has
a risk pool with a Medicare supplement & but no
low income premium discount. The aged/disabled level is $637/mo (the
SSI rate), the working parent level is 28% (2007) & the ADAP & CHIP
levels are 200%. Gov. Perry & the legislature (both R) ended spend downs
& CHIP prostheses, physical therapy & private duty nurse coverage;
raised CHIP co-pays & premiums; cut Medicaid home health care; ended
adult chiropractic & podiatry care; limited the number of Medicaid
monthly Rx’s; moved patients into HMOs (but allowed opt-outs) and let
contracts to privatize eligibility (but contractor failures & patient
access problems crippled that plan) and now the
state---over advocates’ & union objections-- plans to implement a new,
untested IT eligibility system for nearly 1 million aged & disabled..
A court order to improve children’s care requires $700 million+ in new
state spending & a pediatric fee increase. The state restored Medicaid &
CHIP mental health, vision & hearing aid coverage & CHIP dental care;
gives birth control & health screening to women under 175%; but dropped
day treatment. It liberalized CHIP time limit rules, raised car asset
limits & disregards child care costs in counting income. It promotes
HSAs (allowing opt-outs), required some
mental health parity in private plans; and seeks a waiver to use DSH
funds to subsidize
barebones
insurance (only 2 Rx’s/mo; 5 MD visits &
hospital days/yr; high premiums & co-pays)
starting with parents under 133% & childless, non-disabled adults under
100%, and--in 3 years--all non-Medicare adults under 200%,
if & as funds become available.
See
http://www.hhs.state.tx.us/Medicaid/Reform.shtml
Utah--this
Title XVI state has a risk pool--with a
low income premium discount, but
no Medicare supplement. Its
aged/ disabled level is 100%, its working parent level is 47% (2007),
its CHIP level is 200% & its ADAP (which just
had to adopt some cost containment measures) level is 400%. A
waiver gives basic O/P care, with big co-pays, to uninsured,
non-Medicare adults (even childless & non-disabled) under 150%. The GOP
legislature stopped covering adult dentistry, podiatry; audiology;
speech, occupational & physical therapy; and outdoor wheelchairs, but
restored eyeglasses for all adults & dentistry for the
aged & disabled. The state is considering
expanding insurance subsidies for 5,000 more working adults & 1,000
children--but so far poorly-drafted
crowd-out & other rules deter coverage & cost-sharing isn’t affordable (i..e.,
children’s should be as low as CHIP’s). See “New CHIP/UPP
Waiver..Paper” at
www.healthpolicyproject.org. Gov. Huntsman (R), who already
subsidizes job plan premiums of small firm workers under 200%, asked the
legislature to merely “study” raising the CHIP level to 250% & signed a
bill to set up a health reform panel. Provider fees are too low
Vermont—has
an aged/disabled level of 125%, a parent level of 185%, a CHIP
level of 300%, an ADAP level of 200% & a SPAP level of 175%. The
legislature (D) reversed most of Gov. Douglas’ (R) adult dental cuts
(dentures aren’t covered & there’s a $495/ yr cap). CMS approved
a waiver that, in return for more funds, puts patients in HMOs & favors
HCB care over nursing homes-but also caps future matching. There’s
no risk pool but the state subsidizes insurance for those
under 300%. There’s a $59 million deficit.
Douglas proposed higher Medicaid co-pays & premiums for richer clients,
but the legislature (D) prefers lower Medicaid premium boosts &
small premium raises for subsidized insurance
Virginia---a
209(b) state with no risk pool. Its aged/disabled level is
80%, its working parent level is 31% (2007), its CHIP level is 200% &
its ADAP level is 300% Provider fees are too low. Gov. Kaine (D)
authorized Medicaid for the working disabled & a SPAP for HIV+ Medicare
patients under 300%. His health study board urged higher parent (100%) &
CHIP (300%) levels & subsidized insurance for those under 200%
Even with a now-D Senate,
a $1.2+ billion deficit & a
still-GOP House led the legislature to agree only to $25
million for low income clinics, limited indigent adult dentistry and
added pregnancy care & breast/cervical cancer screening; plus $42
million more for mental health & funding 600 more mentally disabled HCB
slots—but also to cut planned hospital & LTC fee raises by $76 million.
The GOP House killed a pilot plan to subsidize insurance for
workers under 200% (Kaine got private foundation funding for it
instead).
Virgin Islands--its
matching rate is far below what states get. Some
say its ADAP (with a 400% level)
has a waiting list.
Washington--has
a risk pool with a Medicare supplement & low income
premium discounts for those under 300%; Its aged/disabled level is about
$683 (the SSI/SSP rate), its working parent level is 76% (2007) & its
ADAP level is 300%. Gov. Gregoire & the legislature (both D);
liberalized state Basic Health insurance for non-Medicare adults;
restored some adult dentistry; covered Pt. D Extra Help co-pays; passed
mental health parity; raised CHIP’s level to 250%; made private plans
let children stay covered to 25; and set up a 2nd health reform panel.
Providers evicted 75+
assisted living residents due to low Medicaid fees, King Co .public
clinics face a $10 million shortfall; and the state has a $2.5 billion
deficit
West Virginia---has
an aged/disabled level of $637/mo (the SSI rate), a working parent level
of 35% (2007) & an ADAP level of 250%. It covers only 4 brand Rx’s/mo
(+6 generics). Its risk pool has no Medicare supplement
or low income premium discount (but
state insurance staff expressed interest in having one during a 7/08
Kaiser risk pool symposium). It cut medical equipment & transport
funds; denies adult dental care; and didn’t properly adopt LTC &
HCB care medical admission rules (which still limit HCB admissions).
Gov. Manchin & the legislature (both D) boosted the CHIP level to 220%;
raised low income clinic funding; started an Rx
plan (free except for a $30/yr fee)
for non-Medicare adults under 200%; began offering patients extra
mental health care & Rx’s to sign “personal responsibility” contracts
(only 8% did). Some say the plan is a failure &
blocks access to care.
Fund shortfalls forced Manchin to seek an $8 million
Medicaid cut
Wisconsin---has
an aged/disabled level of about $720.78 (the SSI/SSP rate), a parent
level of 185% & an ADAP level of 300%. The waiver-funded SPAP (with a
level of about 240%) excludes
the disabled). The risk pool
has a Medicare supplement & low income premium discounts for
those under $25,000. Gov. Doyle (D) asked the legislature (R-House;
D-Senate) to raise the parent level to 200% & CHIP’s from 250% to 300%
(capped by CMS at 250%). The House (R) agreed to raise the CHIP level
(71,000 more clients then enrolled)--but not the parent or
aged/disabled levels—and to give
non-Medicare childless adults under 200% O/P --but
not I/P – coverage
starting in 1/09.
There’s a $652 million deficit
Wyoming---has
no spend down; an aged/disabled level of about $662 (the
SSI/SSP rate), a working parent level of 55% (2007) & an ADAP level of
332%; its SPAP covers non-Medicare patients under 100%. The legislature
(R) is
considering covering CHIP parents under 200%; and expanded CHIP
mental health, vision & dental benefits Gov.
Freudenthal (D) added a low income premium discount
for those under 250% to the risk pool, which also has a
Medicare supplement.
SOURCES AND RESOURCES
For the 48 states & DC,
the
2008 federal poverty level
(FPL)
is $10,400 yearly ($866.67 monthly) for one plus $3600 yearly ($300
monthly) for each add’l person;
see the Asst. Secy. for Plan. & Eval. pages at
www.dhhs.gov for AK & HI.
The 2007 FPL was $10,210/yr ( $851/ mo) for one and $3,480/yr ($290/mo)
more for each add’l person .The
2008 SSI rates (not including any state supplements, or SSPs) are
$637 monthly for one person & $956 per couple. Email
sherry.barber@ssa.gov
for “State Assistance
Programs for SSI Recipients, 1/07”(the
last update) on states’
Medicaid eligibility rules for SSI recipients, state supplement (SSP)
amounts & states’ Sec. 1616, 1634 & 209(b) arrangements.
See
www.healthinsuranceinfo.net
for a state-by-state “Consumer
Guide for Getting & Keeping …Insurance”; the State Health Expansion
Resource Ctr. items at
www.familiesusa.org “Medicaid, SCHIP & Econ. Downturn..”
at
www.kff.org projecting 1 million more patients in this recession,
costing $3.4 billion ($1.4 billion for states); and
”Expanding Medicaid..”at
www.cbpp.org finding Medicaid expansions are cheaper than
subsidizing private insurance
See
http://www.kff.org/medicaidbenefits/index.jsp
for states’ 2003-06
coverage of chiropractors, podiatry,
eyeglasses, optometry, hearing aids,
audiologists, psychologists,
prosthetics, hospices, LTC, home health, medical equipment, prescribed
& OTC drugs and physical, occupational & speech therapy.
The “adult benefit chart”
at
http://www.medicaiddental.org tabulates
state coverage of adult dentistry. The
”Coverage For All…”
study at
www.Healthcareforuninsured.org says most state expansions offer
inadequate mental health & substance abuse care.
See guides on blocking bad state plan amendments
at
www.healthlaw.org. To ensure that
plan changes/waivers get approved by legislatures & not just Governors
& state agencies, see
http://www.nachc.com/advocacy/Files/state-policy/model520state520legislationh.pdf
&
http://www.nachc.com/advocacy/Files/ModelStateLegislation-AppropriationsRiderssr031406_RS-.pdf;
and a state health reform/expansion guide
at
www.communitycatalyst.org .
See “ADAP Watch”
at www.NASTAD.org
for news of state waiting lists, cost
containment measures & state websites.
The “National ADAP Monitoring
Report, 2008”,
Table XI, at
www.kff.org , lists
state income & asset levels; Table XXII charts state policies on
Part D; and the
Report also covers state
cost sharing rules & medical criteria and/or prior authorization needed
for special or costly drugs.
State ADAP formularies are in a 2nd adjacent
document.
States’ 8/03
cost-sharing & premiums are at
http://www.GAO.gov/new.items/d04491.pdf ;
but see newer state drug co-pay data in “State Medicaid Drug Reim.
3/05” at
www.ascp.com , “Pharm. Benefits [in] State [Medicaid] 2005-6” at
www.npcnow.org on formularies, fees, OTC
coverage, prior authorization, prescribing/dispensing limits &
co-pays; and “Impact of Medicaid Copayment..”
on patient Rx access in Medical Care
(6/08) at
www.lww-medicalcare.com
See
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/health/SPAPCoordination.htm ,
http://www.medicare.gov/spap.asp
& “The Role of..[SPAPs
After]..Implementation of ..Part D” (7/07) at
www.kff.org .
Email
jcoburn@hdadvocates.org for a chart on how drug makers’ private
corporate charity Patient Assistance Programs (PAPs) interact with Part
D.
The 6 drug classes originally excluded by Pt D can be covered by
Medicaid; such state coverage is re-tabulated from CMS surveys
at
www.medicareadvocacy.org/Part D_ExcludedDrugsbyState.htm
(12/1/05 report under “News”
icon).
See
“Individual…Models of LTC’ at
www.statehealthfacts.org for state
coverage of HCB waiver, home health, personal aides & related care;
“Money Follows the Person 101”
at
www.nsclc.org ; and “A
Balancing Act…” on states moving patients
from institutions into HCB care at
www.aarp.org (Pub.Pol Instit).
Email
lsmetanka@nccnhr.org for 2006 state personal needs allowances (PNAs)
for SNF/ ICF patients and those in SSP-funded board & care homes
See CMS’ letters limiting state CHIP income levels over 250% at
www.familiesusa.org ;
www.georgetown.edu (Hlth Pol Inst pp)
for state waivers to cover parents;
and
“Determining Income Eligibility..&
..Disregards in Child..Medicaid & SCHIP”(5/08)
at
www.kff.org for states’ income eligibility levels and disregards for
child-only Medicaid & SCHIP.
See
www.naschip.org on state health insurance
risk pools & websites and to order hard copy of “Comprehensive
Health Insurance for High Risk Individuals: A State-by-State Analysis,
21st Ed.” on
state risk pools: funding, eligibility, benefits, any Medicare
supplements, premium amounts & any state low
income premium discounts.
See” TIICANN
materials” under ”what’s new” at
www.healthlaw.org for
“ Painless
Ways To Deal With State Medicaid Budget Shortfalls”
to avoid eligibility &
benefits
cuts;
“State..Aged/Disabled..Income
Levels” & “State.. Parental.. Income Levels”;
a
health & Medicaid
“Glossary”;
“SPAPs , Part D and..the Disabled”; “How States Can Make
More Patients Eligible for..Full..Extra Help at Little..Cost..”;
and “2008 VA Health..Benefits”.
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