Tag: Medicaid

  • Medical debt rising for people who pay through their credit cards

    Medical debt rising for people who pay through their credit cards

    Millions of people max out their credit cards, and an increasing number max out because of a costly medical condition. Patients want to pay their medical bills, or they must pay their bills in order to receive care. But, these days, using a credit card to pay medical bills likely means a medical debt hike because interest rates are rising, reports Bob Herman for StatNews.

    Using a credit card when you are unable to pay off the debt as required by the bank issuing the card is a risky proposition and a particularly risky one now. Interest rates are rising. Credit limits are shrinking. Failing to pay the minimum jeopardizes your credit rating and could lead to all kinds of toxic consequences, including wage garnishment and lawsuits.

    Each time the Fed raises its interest rate, the cost of borrowing money for just about any reason is likely to increase. Credit limits could shrink, leaving people with more debt on their credit cards than is permissible. They are potentially liable for higher penalties if they don’t pay the debt back. And, getting credit is also likely to be more difficult.

    If you can’t pay your medical bill, whatever you do, think twice before agreeing to a credit card from your hospital. The card might seem appealing and help you at the moment, but it could have exceptionally high interest rates. Credit card interest rates are already very high, as much as 21 percent. People who owe more are likely to be charged higher rates because they present greater credit risk.

    One hospital credit card, CareCredit does not charge interest for as long as 24 months if cardholders pay off their debt. But, people who do not pay off their debt can be stuck with interest from day one. And, the interest rate charged is currently 27 percent for new accounts.

    Anyone who is struggling to pay for medical care should look into Medicaid eligibility requirements in their state. Many states allow you to “spend down” to Medicaid eligibility levels, meaning that even if your income is above eligibility levels, if your medical expenses bring that income down to below eligibility levels, you could qualify for Medicaid. Assets will be considered, but the value of your home, if you own it, is not considered. If you qualify, Medicaid could retroactively cover some of your care.

    Here’s more from Just Care:
  • Washington State delays plans to give residents a long-term care benefit

    Washington State delays plans to give residents a long-term care benefit

    If the US does not already have a long-term care crisis, and there’s a good argument we do, it’s hard to imagine we won’t face a crisis shortly. As the cohort of older Americans grows, so does the need for long-term care, and the cost is likely to be prohibitive for most. While Congress is currently sitting on its hands, Washington State passed a state-based long-term care benefit, but its launch is now delayed until 2023, with coverage not beginning until 2026.

    Washington is the first state to pass a law offering residents long-term care coverage, albeit quite limited in scope. The benefit covers up to $36,500 in long-term care costs in an individual’s lifetime. It is designed to pay for aide services as well as home modifications and other needs, or 2o hours a week of home care for one year. It could be a huge help for many, and still not enough help for some.

    The Washington long-term care benefit, WA Cares Fund, has been delayed to July 2026. To cover the costs of WA Cares Fund, 3.1 million workers in Washington are expected to pay a small payroll contribution beginning in July 2023, much like they do with Medicare and Social Security. Annual costs will be about $302 for someone earning $52,000 or 0.58 percent of earned income. Costs will be far higher for wealthier individuals. You must pay in for at least three years to qualify for the benefit.

    Most people don’t realize that Medicare does not cover long-term care. It covers no more than 100 days in a skilled nursing facility for people who have been hospitalized for at least three days and who need daily skilled nursing or therapy services. It also covers some home health care services–between 20 and 30 or so hours a week–for people who are homebound and need skilled therapy or nursing services on an intermittent basis.

    Medicaid does cover long-term care. It is an invaluable benefit. But, in order to get Medicaid, your income and assets need to be extremely low. Thankfully, in many states, if your income and assets are above the eligibility level, your health care expenses need to bring your income and assets down to the eligibility level before Medicaid will kick in.

    Can the Washington state long-term care benefit work? It’s hard to know. With more than six in ten people needing long-term care at some time in their lives, it will take a lot of money to cover the cost of the benefit. And, many Washington state residents appear to be worried about paying in and not being able to get back what they invested.

    Nearly 500,000 Washington state residents have turned to buying private long-term care insurance as an alternative that exempts them from the requirement of paying into the state fund. Private long-term care insurance has always been a gamble, with premiums able to double out of nowhere and the benefit often more limited than people realize.

    Congress needs to step in to avert a long-term care tsunami. The population of people over 85 and the population of people with dementia are expected to double by 2042. The cost of long-term care is only rising. Countless people will die needlessly, in isolation, if nothing is done.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Our nursing home crisis is only worsening; who cares?

    Our nursing home crisis is only worsening; who cares?

    Jay Caspian King writes for the New York Times about our worsening nursing home crisis. For decades now, big corporations and private equity firms have been buying up nursing homes, collecting money from Medicare and Medicaid to provide care, and failing their residents. Will Congress act to protect vulnerable older Americans and people with disabilities?

    Early on in the pandemic, the media did a good job of highlighting the nursing home crisis. Thousands of nursing home residents died needlessly. The facilities were understaffed and doing a poor job of caring for their residents. But, the attention did nothing to address the problem.

    Instead of fixing the nursing home crisis, many politicians tried to bury it. The National Academy of Sciences issued a report recommending major industry reforms, such as smaller nursing homes, better pay and training for workers. Right now, some nursing homes have 100 percent turnover, staff are so underpaid.

    The Biden administration also drew up a plan to improve nursing home conditions and made note of private equity’s mounting investment in nursing homes–up to $100 billion in 2018.

    But reports and plans recommending specific reforms to the industry have been issued for the last several decades and little has been done to improve conditions. It costs money to ensure nursing homes have more and better paid staff. It costs money to oversee nursing homes and ensure that when they violate the law, they are penalized appropriately.

    There are a lot of regulations in place. But, even when major violations are identified, nursing home are allowed to continue to operate. Change is not possible without an overhaul of chain nursing homes and other for-profit nursing homes.

    We need more transparency as to where government money is going, how nursing homes are spending the money they receive from government. People need to know how much of that money is being put towards patient care. We cannot continue to let nursing home owners profit without being held to account for the care they provide residents.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • What happens to people with Medicare and Medicaid when Biden declares end to public health emergency?

    What happens to people with Medicare and Medicaid when Biden declares end to public health emergency?

    As a result of the public health emergency declared in response to the COVID pandemic, many more people are enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid. But, as soon as July, the Biden administration is likely to end this emergency, and many dual-eligibles could lose their Medicaid coverage. Erin Weir Lakhmani of Mathematica reports in Health Affairs on the challenges dual-eligibles face and how to address them.

    Today about 12 million people have both Medicare and Medicaid. They are at particularly serious risk when states make redeterminations regarding their Medicaid eligibility. They tend to have multiple chronic conditions and to use long-term services and supports, including home care services and nursing home care, which Medicare does not cover.

    Without Medicaid, many of these people will be cut off from long-term services and supports. Medicaid support often enables them to age in place, remaining in their homes rather than having to move into a nursing home.

    Dual-eligibles are also more likely to struggle with renewing their Medicaid applications. Many have Alzheimer’s disease or another type of dementia. And, many have low health literacy levels and might not understand Medicaid renewal notices even if they don’t have dementia. They will need help, which can be hard to come by.

    As a general rule, dual-eligibles lose Medicaid because they cannot manage the recertification process not because they no longer qualify. The issue isn’t a change in assets or income. They struggle to overcome the barriers and requirements their states impose to gain Medicaid eligibility.

    States are required to use ex parte processes to renew people’s Medicaid, if  possible, and not depend on dual-eligibles to complete forms. But, they tend not to use ex parte processes as much as they might. In order to determine whether people do not exceed asset limits, states tend to ask dual-eligibles to respond to requests to renew their Medicaid eligibility.

    When dual-eligibles lose Medicaid, they can suffer profoundly. They might forego or otherwise not be able to get important medical care if they lose Medicaid wrap-around coverage. In the long-term, that can raise costs for the states as it can lead to severe health consequences.

    What can be done?

    • If you receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI), the Social Security Administration can determine Medicaid eligibility for you in 34 states.
    • States should use ex parte reviews more often.
    • States could also check to see whether dual-eligibles who are losing Medicaid qualify for Medicare Savings Programs, such as QMB or SLMB and Q-1 that help offset Medicare costs.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Millions could lose health insurance when the public health emergency ends

    Millions could lose health insurance when the public health emergency ends

    When the COVID pandemic hit, the Biden administration declared a public health emergency which, among other things, extended Medicaid coverage to millions of people. For the vast majority of them, that coverage is a lifeline. As of now, the public health emergency could end as early as mid July. What happens to people with Medicaid then?

    The Biden administration needs to act thoughtfully and deliberately before declaring an end to the public health emergency. Since it was declared, Medicaid enrollment is up 12 percent and 25 percent of Americans now get their coverage through Medicaid. Taking Medicaid away from them because they are no longer eligible will have dire consequences.

    With the end of the public health emergency and the federal Medicaid funding that goes with it, as many as 15 million low and middle-income Americans could end up losing their health insurance. As of now, states are forbidden from kicking people off of Medicaid and have received additional funds to cover Medicaid’s cost. But, states will need to ensure all Medicaid enrollees remain eligible once the emergency is over.

    Many people who should have Medicaid coverage could lose it. A lot of people with Medicaid who remain eligible for Medicaid might not have the ability to undertake their state’s complex renewal application process. Other people with Medicaid might no longer qualify because their income is a little too high, or they might have moved to another state. Many of them likely have no clue that their coverage could end once the public health emergency ends and will only find out when they are told by their doctor’s office, their hospital or their pharmacy.

    As it is, the uninsured no longer have access to free Covid-19 testing and treatment. That protection ended last month. There are no funds to pay for it. Free vaccines are also about to end.

    It is not unreasonable for the Biden administration to end mask mandates and the like, as Covid’s threat to the public health appears to be waning. But, ending Medicaid protections is another story. Covid-19 has not gone away. Without insurance, many Americans will be hard-pressed to afford needed care, be it for Covid or something else.

    This year, people who lose Medicaid can still enroll in a state health insurance exchange plan. Because Congressional funding of Affordable Care Act subsidies for people with low and middle incomes lasts through the end of this year, their insurance premiums will cost very little, if anything. But, in 2023, they will be at risk of being uninsured again.

    Our dysfunctional fragmented and costly health care system affords few among us a way to address a public health emergency, let alone a complex disease. Costs are just too high, even with insurance. As a start, the Biden administration should extend Medicaid protections at least through the end of the year, even if it ends other protections that came with the declaration of a public health emergency.

    And, if it wants to ensure that Americans are prepared for the next public health emergency or simply to safeguard people’s health and well-being, Congress should pass legislation that guarantees health care for all; it should pass Medicare for all.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • How Connecticut Eliminated Capitated Managed Care in Medicaid

    How Connecticut Eliminated Capitated Managed Care in Medicaid

    A talk presented by Sheldon Toubman, then with New Haven Legal Assistance Association edited Transcript – February 2019

    In 2012, Connecticut replaced managed care organizations (MCOs) in its Medicaid program with a program of “managed fee for service”. Enhanced care coordination for all Medicaid recipients became an important part of this program, which has reduced Medicaid spending and provided better service to patients. In this talk, presented to the PNHP-NYMetro Research/Study Group, Sheldon Toubman, then at New Haven Legal Assistance, describes the process by which it happened.

    I have been a legal aid lawyer with New Haven Legal Assistance for almost 28 years and other programs for three years beyond that [since August 2021, Toubman moved to Disability Rights Connecticut]. For most of that time, I have been focusing on the Medicaid Program.

    In that role, I came of age in Medicaid advocacy in Connecticut in 1995 as the state was moving from the traditional Medicaid fee for service program, where the provider provides the service and they then bill for the service, to what other states were increasingly doing at the time, a capitated managed care system in which the state pays a fixed amount of money per member per month for health care services.

    I will give you the background of what we had in Connecticut, the strategy that advocates came up with, and then where we are today. It was seven years ago, January 2012, that Connecticut made the transition to what I call “managed fee for service”, or single payer. We’ve now had seven years of experience and I can tell you exactly what we’ve gotten for our money. Recognize that Connecticut is rather unusual. There are only four states that don’t have capitated managed care running their Medicaid program as you do in New York.

    So, when the capitated managed care model rolled out, there were eleven MCOs, Managed Care Organizations. We were told that the state was going to save money by paying them 95% of what we would otherwise have paid for the same health services under Medicaid. You won’t be surprised that the managed care industry managed to convince the state not to reduce its fees, but to pay it 100% of current spending. And you’ll not be surprised to hear the industry said that actually it’s not getting enough, so it needs more money, even though the whole premise was that it’s going to save money. (I should say that this was for our family and children population, not the elderly and disabled population, which is a sicker population; generally, family, kids and pregnant women are healthier populations. That is the group that was in the managed care system.)

    This dynamic started right away — they were always demanding more money, but the state had become dependent on them.

    The MCOs also argued that they were going to improve care because they are uniquely in a position to coordinate care. This is especially noteworthy because there is always a complaint from Medicaid recipients that their care is uncoordinated, that they see a lot of different doctors and nobody is watching out for them. So MCOs would say they’re going to coordinate care so that the state saves money, improves access to care, and thus improves the quality of care.

    However, in practice, what we saw constantly was routine lack of access to services. It was horrendous in the case of behavioral health, where kids who had been abused would be told they get a limited number of sessions and, if their provider was willing, they could beg for more. These abusive practices were partly a function of the fact that the MCOs subcontracted with other capitated insurance companies, so if the MCO was getting, say, $200 a month for all health care, they could contract for $11 a head to a specialized for-profit company to provide behavioral health, and those companies were even worse in restricting access to care.

    The basic problem with capitated MCOs is the same as with commercial insurance: every dollar of health care they provide comes out of their pocket. So the incentives were pretty obvious. Their messaging in response was always, along the lines of: “Don’t worry about that. Yes, it seems that way, but if they get sick, it’s on our dime. If somebody’s not taken care of and they end up in the hospital, we have to pay for that. So we have a real incentive to coordinate care and make sure that bad things like that don’t happen. We’re going to keep people healthy.”

    The reason that was false is, first of all, these are mostly for-profit, publicly-traded companies. All they care about is how well they’re doing this quarter. So if they can keep someone’s diabetes under control and keep them out of the hospital next year or the year after, that’s interesting but it’s not relevant to what they’re trying to do. They’re trying to profit right now.

    Second, people move from one plan to another, and so it may save money only for another plan, so they don’t see the benefit. The consequence is that they never did the things they said they would do. They never coordinated care. They never did the kinds of things that were necessary to prevent complex conditions from developing. And even on basic measures, like the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment requirements of federal Medicaid law, they were doing abysmally.

    And then there was dental access, which was terrible. There was pharmaceutical access, which was terrible. At some point, advocates decided that the basic financial model, where they make money by denying care, was just not going to work. There was no way we were going to reform that basic economic model and make it work for our clients.

    We started with a lawsuit. In 1999, we filed a class action suit against HealthNet and the state, which is ultimately responsible for all Medicaid services even if contracting with MCOs. Our specific allegation was that they were not compliant with due process. They were constantly denying services, but patients were not getting written notice of it. They learned about it because their doctor would say, “I tried to get approval, but they wouldn’t grant it.” There was no written notice to the patient of what the decision was, why it was decided and, more importantly, their right to appeal. These basic rights apply to all state and federal government benefit programs.

    So we brought a lawsuit saying they weren’t providing written notices and in the few cases where they did, the notices were grossly defective. For example, in one case the reason given for being denied was you don’t meet our company’s criteria, unspecified.

    One of the things we uncovered is that, routinely, people would be denied drugs which were covered under Medicaid and therefore covered under these contracts with MCOs. When they were denied, even when they were sent the written notice, it said the drug is not covered for you, which was not true. The drug was simply not on their formulary, which means the prescriber had to go through prior authorization, but it didn’t say that. It was basically a substantive access issue created by misrepresentation of the rules. So our lawsuit included this issue.

    One of the things we did with the lawsuit was to get a lot of media attention. This was the first class action suit ever brought in this country against a Medicaid-contracted insurance company. (Most of the time, people just sue the state; they don’t sue the insurance companies.) Press was really important because insurers really care about bad publicity. They are in a competitive marketplace, especially if they’re in the commercial sphere as well as the Medicaid world. They worry about their name, and their brand. They don’t want to be associated with problems. So we did a lot of press focusing on one MCO, but we also talked about problems with other MCOs as well.

    Advocates emphasized that this system is a black box. No one can tell what they are doing. We know people are routinely being denied service, because they come to our office and tell us that. Getting data on dollars and numbers of denials was really difficult, and the state couldn’t even get the information. So, one of the things that happened that we were involved in was finding some other avenue.

    We started focusing on recipients’ lack of access to providers, meaning that they just couldn’t find one. They couldn’t find a cardiologist, a neurologist. Various specialties just didn’t take Medicaid under any plan. This was a huge issue, related to low payment rates, i.e., specialists were being paid too little by the MCOs. So we wanted to get information about the rates paid. Someone filed a request under the state’s Freedom of Information Act, the open records law, asking for the payment rates for each of certain kinds of specialists, for each of a set of codes, for each of the MCOs.

    The state responded saying, essentially, “We don’t have that data and the Freedom of Information Act applies only to what’s in the possession of the state.” The state correctly said, “We don’t have the rates that the docs are being paid.” But we have in our state law, special to Connecticut and maybe to Pennsylvania, that a large, privately-owned contractor which is providing at least $2.5 million a year in services and is essentially performing a “governmental function,” that is, it taking on a role of government, is subject to that law. And that was really easy to show because the elderly and disabled populations in Medicaid were not in managed care, so all the things that the insurance companies were doing for the family population, the state itself was doing for the elderly and disabled populations, i.e., MCOs were performing that same governmental role. So advocates crafted a second Freedom of Information Act asking for the provider rates directly from the MCOs.

    In addition, parallel to the request for MCO provider rate information, advocates got involved in trying to get information about the numbers of pharmacy denials for lack of prior authorization. One of the ways insurances companies block access to drugs is they impose extra burdens and quantity limits for medication requests. We wanted to know how often does that happen. So we made a FOIA request essentially saying to the state, “If you don’t have the data, please get it from the MCOs. They have to provide it under the FOIA because they’re performing a governmental function in running a portion of the Medicaid program in general, and providing prescription drugs in particular.”

    This caused a firestorm. Initially, the state denied that the MCOs were performing a governmental function. We appealed that denial to the Freedom of Information Commission which enforces our open records law. It was a standing room-only hearing because the entire industry was really worried that we were going to have a situation where private parties would be subject to the law, and a Freedom of Information Act request could be submitted by anyone. That’s a scary thought if you’re a corporate entity

    Advocates got great media coverage about this, because the messaging was that these entities didn’t want to be accountable for how they spent the taxpayers’ money. They just want to take the money and not be accountable. And advocates said the state officials don’t want to hold them accountable either.

    We won before the Freedom of Information Commission, but it was appealed to the superior court by some of the MCOs. The state Attorney General then joined the side that was going after managed care organizations, which really annoyed the state agency. In any event, while this was pending, we put pressure on the governor, and there were op eds and editorials saying, “Yes, you should hold these state contractors accountable.” It got to the point where the governor gave up and said to the MCOs, essentially, All right, you’re going to be bound by this obligation, no matter what the courts say. You’re taking hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer money, so you should be accountable and we’re going to put it in the contract. Several of the big MCOs balked, so the governor pulled the trigger and basically said, “Okay, fine, you’re out of the program, but in the meantime, we’re going to turn you into non-risk entities.” That is, they would be administrative service organization contractors, not insurance companies taking financial risk. This was really important because this is what advocates wanted, and ultimately what they got, but not at this point. It was just temporary.

    The governor also said she was going to find other insurers which would accept this FOIA requirement. At about the same time, she decided to create a new subsidized program for lower income but non-Medicaid recipients called Charter Oak Health Plan, and she needed insurance companies to run it despite the uncertain costs of this new population. She went to the insurance companies and said, basically: If you agree to run my Charter Oak plan and take the risk, we’ll give you this very lucrative business of Medicaid clients. An RFP went out, and it did include that the insurers would be accountable under the Freedom of Information Act and they got three bidders. So, the three bidders agreed to contract on a risk basis, and advocates were back to square one, after they thought they had won.

    Advocates then started exploring how much the new companies were being paid. Whatever capitated rate the state pays a Managed Care Organization has to be approved by the federal Medicaid agency, and so they have to be audited. (Half or more of the state money paid to MCOs is actually federal money.) Advocates felt that the rate that the auditors found was acceptable was actually excessive. The state Comptroller then contracted with an accounting firm to come in to audit the auditors. They found the payments to the MCOs were at least $50 million/year too high. Advocates concluded they were being paid excessively through what was essentially a legal bribe from the Governor, to get them to run the Charter Oak business, which was her priority.

    Another thing that was happening under the earlier set of MCOs was that a group of pediatricians was focusing on the Medicaid provider network and the fact that it appeared to be bogus. That is, the list of doctors and other providers listed by the plans on their websites were not real, practicing providers or they were real people but were not really participating in the plans which listed them. So, these folks pushed to get a “secret shopper” survey done, where people got dummy Medicaid ID numbers and called up real providers and tried to set up real appointments for real medical problems. It was fictitious, but it sounded real to the office they were calling. The results were really disturbing and eye opening. For all of the MCOs, only about 25% of the time could people get an appointment, and the vast majority of times, the provider said, “I’m not participating in Medicaid” or “I’m not participating in Medicaid under your plan,” or “I’m not participating for new patients.” So, the vast majority of the time, the lists were bogus.

    This was really important because, about the same time this study came out, we finally received through the FOIA effort the provider rates that the MCOs were paying. Though they always claimed that they paid generously, it turned out they were mostly just paying the same low Medicaid rates already paid by the state under the rest of the Medicaid program. So the suspicions appeared to be correct that the reason specialists wouldn’t see these folks was because of the low rates.

    In addition, under the last set of MCOs, we started uncovering more misrepresentation of drugs being not covered when, in fact they just required prior authorization. Two very different reasons. When electronically denying drugs, two of the MCOs chose not to use the code which states the drug required prior authorization, which was the case, and, instead, used a code which said the drug was not covered at all. We emphasized that the MCOs were committing a kind of fraud, misrepresenting what is covered under the plan. So even though they were now subject to the Freedom of Information Act as a matter of contract, they were still misrepresenting what their coverage was in order to cut corners.

    At this point, advocates decided to offer an alternative, saying something like, “You know, this is not working. This capitated managed care for poor people is not working. Maybe we should do what some other states are doing.” The federal Medicaid statute offers an alternative type of managed care that doesn’t involve capitation at all. It’s called Primary Care Case Management. What this means is the state pays primary care providers extra to manage care. The MCOs always claim to manage care, but we all know they only manage cost.

    So, advocates suggested that Connecticut adopt, at least on a pilot basis, what other states like North Carolina and Oklahoma were doing, which is to pay primary care providers directly to coordinate care or manage care, paying them to actually coordinate care in a meaningful way. Advocates got a pilot plan through the legislature. It was very small, and the state Medicaid agency did not want to implement it, but advocates made a lot of noise about the fact they were not implementing it.

    Then, in 2010, we had a governor’s race. Advocates educated all of the candidates about the problems of managed care and we pointed out that this Primary Care Case Management (PCCM) model seemed to be working well in other states. We think that we should basically ditch this whole experiment with insurance companies. When Governor Malloy won in 2010, he set up various committees to develop issue briefs, and advocates lobbied those groups to lay out the PCCM option, emphasizing that capitated managed care wasn’t working, and was quite expensive.

    So, three weeks into his administration, in early 2011, Governor Malloy announced that he was going to show the door to the MCOs and adopt some form of Primary Case Care Management, using primary care providers to coordinate care, and also contract with an Administrative Service Organization (ASO), as the insurers had temporarily been turned into over the FOIA dispute. The ASO would take on some of the role that insurance companies play, but not on a risk basis, handling things like prior authorizations, recruiting providers, and so on. Behavioral health and dental services were contracted to different ASOs to manage those services, respectively, also on a non-risk basis.

    That announcement was made in February 2011, and an RFP was issued not too long thereafter. Connecticut chose a non-profit entity, Community Health Network of Connecticut, to take on that role. It used to be a not-for-profit, capitated MCO, and it was now being turned into an ASO.

    We then got involved in advocating for what the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) requirements were going to be for the PCCM-like program, because we were really going to use those to manage or coordinate care. We had to beef up the requirements on primary care providers and went with National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) accreditation of PCMHs as the standard. They had to be accredited as a patient-centered medical home in order to participate and get paid extra for doing care coordination.

    That’s the basic history. Now, I want to fast forward to where we are today. It has not been absolutely perfect. There have been problems. But, overall, it has been a dramatic improvement, and the materials that have been distributed tell the story. Just in the hard dollars, in per member per month cost. (You don’t look at total costs under the Medicaid program in part because our program, like that of all the blue states, did a Medicaid expansion and those total costs have gone up substantially because there are a lot more people covered. Connecticut Medicaid member per month costs are down 14% from $706 in the first quarter of 2012 to $610 in the first quarter of 2018. So, that’s six years, and the costs went down. As a result, Connecticut, which is one of the highest health care cost states in the country — our per-enrollment costs had been the 9th highest, now they’re 22nd. So, we’ve actually done very well through this model in terms of total per member per month costs: To have costs go down when, in every state that has managed care, they always demand more money. To not have that hanging over you, if you’re a state agency, it’s pretty nice that you actually have control of the cost.

    The other question is, how much of those total costs are actually going to health care? As we all know, there are huge administrative costs that go into the private risk-based insurance system. When we had managed care companies, it was hard to get the data, but we found routinely 20%, even 25% or higher administrative overhead. We actually saw about 40% at one point for administrative costs for one of the plans, under the CHIP program. Based upon the data that has been available now for a few years, we have done really well on both the total costs and the medical loss ratio, which is now about 96.5% [97% as of 2021]. Only 3.5 cents on the dollar goes to administrative costs, paying for the ASO and the state’s own administrative costs. The rest is all going to health care. So it’s a win-win in terms of the cost and where the money goes.

    We really care about quality, about access to care. The data there is pretty good as well. Some really basic stuff like significant increases in preventive care, 16.3% from 2015 to 2017, hospital admissions per thousand down 6.29%, readmissions down 3.52%.

    There are several reasons, but one of them is the use of patient-centered medical homes. Close to half of our Medicaid population is now attributed to accredited patient-centered medical homes. They have the infrastructure for adequately coordinating care so people don’t end up in the hospital, and they provide routine care and the child visits and screenings and so on. Under the new system, the state has the data on what is being done and doesn’t have to beg an insurance company to give them the data.

    Though the primary responsibility for coordinating care lies with the primary care providers, the medical ASO (CHNCT) has done extra things to coordinate care. Their major program is called Intensive Care Management. This involves identifying people who are the frequent flyers, who go in and out of the ER frequently and need special attention, as well as individuals referred to the program. They have an aggressive outreach program where they literally go out to the people where they are in their community and try to get them in contact with their primary care provider. Ideally, it’s a patient-centered medical home, to make sure that going forward, somebody is actually looking out for the various issues they have — behavioral health issues, medication access issues, home care, whatever. The result is that, for their Intensive Care Management members, in 2017 the total cost of care dropped 12%.

    So, ER usage has gone down 25% and hospitalization dropped significantly. They actually have developed good programs to do the very thing which the MCOs always claimed they did but never actually did to actually coordinate care. If you do this, you keep people out of the ER and avoid readmissions, you save money. Again, tt’s not perfect, and we’ve got issues, but we think the system has worked to save money the right way, not by denying services but by providing better service.

    The last thing to point out is the handout “Medicaid’s Care Management program is saving lives and money, but savings may be going to PCMH+ ACOs.” ACOs, Accountable Care Organizations, are the latest thing that everybody who’s anybody in health policy is supposed to believe in as the answer to our problems with health care cost. ACOs put financial risk onto (generally larger) provider groups instead of insurance companies.

    The idea, mostly pushed in Medicare but now in Medicaid as well, is that you put provider groups at financial risk and they’ll somehow do the right thing, keep costs down but not in a bad way, not by harming access, denying services, denying referrals. Somehow, they’ll do it in the right way. To me, that’s frankly religion. It’s belief in a system that hasn’t been proven, that you can’t really prove and has been very controversial. Unfortunately, Connecticut has adopted a shared savings type of ACO program, called PCMH+, that is very different from patient-centered medical homes, PCMH without the “plus”. And the primary difference is the use of a shared savings payment model in PCMH+.

    If groups of providers respond positively to an RFP, they’re in a system where any of the money they save on the total cost of care of their own patients, using actuarial data and some risk adjustment, they get to keep half of. Advocates are very concerned. We have one year of data now, and it suggests that this is not saving money and may be harming access to care. We don’t know where that’s going at this point.

    The basic point about our system: under managed fee-for-service, the state maintains the risk, and is using both insurance companies on a non-risk basis to do certain administrative actions in a good way to meet the goals of improving care while keeping costs down, and PCMHs to coordinate care on a regular basis. There’s still an access problem with specialists because of low reimbursement rates.

    About 45% of the Medicaid population is within an accredited PCMH. It’s a little hard to know exactly what the PCMHs are doing in terms of care coordination, though we do have numbers that show they are doing better than non-PCMHs on most indicators.

    Costs have been relatively flat since we made the transition, suggesting that we are getting some decent care coordination for the elderly/disabled population as well for families with kids which had been in the capitated MCO system.

    At the time of the transition, there were three MCOs, Community Health Network of CT, Aetna, and UnitedHealth (CHNCT, the one non-profit, became the non-risk contracted ASO). For-profit entities have lobbied hard with successive governors to come back into the program on a risk basis, but we’ve managed to hold them off. It’s saving money, so that’s a strong argument for keeping what we have, and we’re also pointing out access and quality gains, as well as the high medical loss ratios. And, over time, the State Medicaid agency became very invested in the new program, which was producing good results.

    We tried to get consumers involved in designing and then advocating for the new program. However, it was very hard to get them engaged.

    It was important overall that advocates had a period in which the managed care organizations were revealed to have been doing bad things, violating the idea of transparency, resisting the Freedom of Information requests, essentially committing a form of fraud in terms of misrepresenting pharmacy coverage, etc. These were important in discrediting them as part of the story. Advocates never would have gotten what they got from the governor if they hadn’t done that. Although advocates could produce white papers saying to the candidates that they should do this or that, the reality is that the climate was what really mattered. They worked really hard at getting media to expose the shortcomings in the system, which changed that climate.

    Advocates didn’t have great data, because the MCOs kept their cards close to the vest. So it was really hard to produce actual numbers of denials or whatever. It was a challenge. Advocates basically said that state officials don’t want to hold huge state contractors accountable with our taxpayer money, so that is why we don’t have the necessary data, even as they had a lot of anecdotal stories of harm.

    In the absence of data, what do you do? You paint a picture based upon what you do have of an industry that is not capable of being reformed. And so advocates made the case that we should do an alternative, the non-risk form of managed care known as PCCM, saying essentially “Here’s another way to do it. It’s not radical. Other states are doing it. And it’s right in the federal Medicaid Act. It’s not a big deal.”

    You can’t win this battle on the basis of the money wasted on risk-based insurers alone. Advocates did a lot of outreach to providers, particularly in the behavioral health area, to develop individual stories of abuse. Advocates learned the techniques the MCOs were using to deny services, the games they played. So they produced a survey which said, “Have you seen this?” We had a one-page referral form and said, don’t give us the name of the client, but do you have a client who has experienced this and if so, please tell us what’s going on. The horror stories were just unbelievable. Advocates emphasized these kids’ cases, and got media attention which was very sympathetic.

    Having providers know we were looking was very important. When advocates met with some of them, they said, “We’ve been looking for a way out for years. We needed you,” or words to that effect, so the advocates’ names got around. And providers contacted them, and they worked together to tell their stories.

  • PACE helps older adults stay in their community

    PACE helps older adults stay in their community

    The Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) is a home and community-based program designed to keep older adults who are at risk for nursing home placement living in their community.  PACE is a partnership between a local sponsoring organization, and Medicare and Medicaid health insurance programs. To become a PACE “participant,” a person must be nursing home eligible. While a person can pay privately for services, most participants have Medicare, Medicaid, or both insurance programs.

    The PACE philosophy: PACE members are called “participants” because they are encouraged to participate in their care–decision making and active care–whenever possible.  The overarching goal of the PACE Model of Care is to keep people living in the community and out of institutional care.  While an individual does not need to visit the PACE Center, which offers adult day programs with wrap around health services, it promotes socialization and addresses common problems of isolation, loneliness, and boredom.

    Who can get PACE? Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE®) serve individuals who are age 55 or older, certified by their state to need nursing home care, able to live safely in the community at the time of enrollment and live in a PACE service area.

    How does PACE work? PACE works by providing care and services in the home, the community, and at the PACE center. It is team-based care that provides everything covered by Medicare and Medicaid if authorized by your health care team.  If your health care team decided you need care and services that Medicare and Medicaid doesn’t cover, PACE may still cover them.  The team provides comprehensive coordinated care and includes the PACE participant, physician, nurse, social worker, recreational specialist, rehabilitation specialists, and transportation specialists.

    Services: Delivering all needed medical and supportive services, a PACE program is able to provide the entire continuum of care and services to older adults with chronic care needs while maintaining their independence in their home for as long as possible. Services include the following:

    • adult day health care that offers nursing; physical, occupational and speech/language therapies; recreational therapies; meals; nutritional counseling; social work and personal care;
    • medical care provided by a PACE physician familiar with the history, needs and preferences of each participant;
    • home health care and personal care;
    • all necessary prescription and over-the-counter medications;
    • medical specialties, such as audiology, dentistry, optometry, and podiatry and speech therapy;
    • respite care; and
    • hospital and nursing home care when necessary.

    See more at: http://www.npaonline.org/policy-advocacy/value-pace#services

    Find a PACE program near you: Currently, there are 144 PACE organizations in 30 states serving 58,000 people. To find out if you or a loved one is eligible, and if there is a PACE program near you, visit www.pace4you.org or www.Medicaid.gov, or call your Medicaid office.

    Beware of for-profit PACE programs: Government audits find for-profit PACE program neglects patients, delays needed care and cancels critical care.

    Learn what to do to ensure safety at home for people aging in their communities. And, see how one new program is helping older adults remain at home with assistance from a handyman, occupational therapist and nurse. For those who like technology solutions, check out how sensors can offer peace of mind to caregivers.

    _________________________

    This post was originally published on March 2, 2016

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  • 2022: Programs that lower your health care costs if you have Medicare

    2022: Programs that lower your health care costs if you have Medicare

    Medicare only covers about half of a typical person’s health care costs, leaving people with average annual out-of-pocket costs of more than $6,100. So, even with Medicare, many people struggle to afford premiums, deductibles and other costs. Some people qualify for Medicaid, which fills most of the gaps in Medicare. But, if you do not qualify for Medicaid, there are other programs that lower your health care costs. Click here or contact your local State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) to find out if you are eligible for any of these programs and how to apply.

    1. Medicare Savings Programs. Depending on your income, Medicare Savings Programs, administered by Medicaid, help pay for Medicare premiums and coinsurance, even if you don’t qualify for Medicaid. There are three programs, Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB), Specified-Low Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB) and Qualified Individual (QI). Income and asset limits, and how they are counted, are listed below for 2021, but vary somewhat by state. You should apply through your local Medicaid office.

    • Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB)—100 percent of federal poverty level (FPL) + $20. If you have QMB, you should not have out-of-pocket costs for Medicare-approved services in traditional Medicare or for in-network services in a Medicare Advantage plan.
      • Income limit monthly depends upon where you live but is around
        • $1,153 for individuals
        • $1,546 for couples
      • Asset limit
        • Individuals: $8,400
        • Couples: $12,600
    • Specified Low-income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB)—120 percent of FPL + $20. SLMB helps pay your Medicare Part B premium.
      • Income limit monthly depends upon where you live but is around
        • $1,379 for individuals
        • $1,851 for couples
      • Asset limit
        • Individuals: $8,400
        • Couples: $12,600
    • Qualifying Individual (QI)—135 percent of FPL +$20, helps pay your Medicare Part B premium.
      • Income limit monthly depends upon where you live but is around
        • $1,549 for individuals
        • $2,080 for couples
      • Asset limit
        • Individuals: $8,400
        • Couples: $12,600

    Several valuable items are not counted as income and assets. No matter what state you live in, the first $20 of your income and the first $65 of your monthly wages are not counted as income. In addition, half of your monthly wages, after the first $65 is not counted, nor are food stamps. Some of your assets are also not counted, including your primary home, if you own it, your car, your wedding and engagement rings, a burial plot and $1,500 in burial funds, your life insurance with a cash value less than $1,500, and your furniture, household and personal items. Your bank accounts, stocks and bonds are counted.

    Tip: If your income is low but too high to qualify you for Medicaid, it is worth looking into whether you qualify for any of these programs. According to MACPAC, an independent agency that advises Congress on Medicaid policy, less than a half the people over 65 who qualify for the Qualified Medicare Beneficiary program (48%) are enrolled. And, an even smaller share of people over 65 who qualify for the Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary program (28%) are enrolled. About one in seven people over 65 (15%) who qualify for the QI program are enrolled.

    2. Extra Help with Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage: You will automatically qualify for the Extra Help program, which is administered by Medicaid, if you qualify for any of the above low-income programs. You can also apply for Extra Help independently. Extra Help pays for some or all of the cost of your Part D drug coverage and is estimated to be worth around $5,100 a year. The amount of help with cost-sharing depends on the level of your income and assets. In 2022, you may qualify if you have up to $20,385 in annual income ($27,465 for a married couple) and up to $15,510 in assets  ($30,950 for a married couple). With Extra Help your drug costs are no more than $3.95 for each generic/$9.85 for each brand-name covered drug. And, depending upon your income, you may pay only part of your Medicare drug plan premiums and deductibles. You get Extra Help automatically if you have Medicaid or a Medicare Savings Program or receive Supplemental Security Income benefits. You can apply for Extra Help online here. (Some states have State Pharmaceutical Assistance Programs that provide even more assistance.)

    3. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and other programs run by the Human Resources and Services Administration: FQHCs are located across the country and provide a wide range of services to underserved populations and areas on a sliding-feed scale. They might waive the Medicare deductible and coinsurance, depending upon your income.

    4. Hill-Burton programs offer free or reduced care at Hill-Burton facilities in 38 states. Hill-Burton does not cover services fully covered by Medicare or Medicaid. Eligibility depends on your family size and income.

    5. Veterans’ Administration: If you are a vet, the Veterans’ Administration (VA) offers low-cost services and prescription drugs directly. And, you can have VA coverage as well as Medicare.

    Keep in mind that you may be eligible for Medicaid based on your income after paying for some health care costs. To contact your state Medicaid office, click here.

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  • How a for-profit program that should provide all-inclusive care neglects its elderly patients

    How a for-profit program that should provide all-inclusive care neglects its elderly patients

    Medicare’s Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly or PACE has been a godsend for a small group of vulnerable patients around the country, allowing them to age in place, with medical and social supports, and avoid moving into a nursing home. But, the federal government opened up PACE, which had historically been operated by not-for-profit agencies, to for-profit companies. Eleanor Laise reports for MarketWatch on the frightening consequences of allowing for-profit entities to administer PACE.

    PACE programs care for older adults in very poor health, with multiple chronic conditions. Nearly half of them suffer from dementia, and most of them are dual-eligibles, with both Medicare and Medicaid. PACE programs are paid a flat fee to manage each participant’s care and allow them to age in their communities.

    It goes without saying that, like Medicare Advantage plans, companies can make a killing off the PACE program if they limit the costly care their participants receive. And, though the program was once only open to non-profit companies, CMS opened it to for-profit companies more than a decade ago.

    Under the administration of non-profits, the PACE program had a wonderful reputation. Now, as for-profits are taking over PACE, it’s a different story altogether.

    One patient under the care of InnovAge—a for-profit PACE program—died, allegedly needlessly. She was admitted to the hospital, severely dehydrated and with sepsis. According to the patient’s daughter, InnovAge was MIA, failing to properly monitor her mom’s condition or even discuss it with her daughter.

    The daughter described for-profit PACE as all-inclusive neglect of elderly participants, “PANE,” with financial growth and profits as their priority. The result is delayed care, difficulty getting specialty care and poor care coordination. One former employee alleged that InnovAge was “denying [patients] access to thousands of medically necessary services.”

    An internal audit in 2016 found that hundreds of participants in California were waiting long periods of time for specialty visits. There was no record of a specialty visit for one participant experiencing heavy bleeding. A month later, the patient went to the emergency room. One employee who reported these issues to a superior ended up leaving after her reports were dismissed.

    The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has stepped in, seemingly doing too little too late.  It has halted enrollment in InnovAge’s Sacramento location, but why not at all locations? It’s the same poor management everywhere.

    “Auditors found instances of ordered services being cancelled, not provided, or unreasonably delayed without any clear rationale,” CMS wrote to InnovAge. How can CMS continue to pay InnovAge to care for the participants already enrolled in its PACE program when the reason for CMS ending new enrollments is failure to provide medically necessary services!

    CMS is paying InnovAge an average of $94,000 for each of its enrollees. Former CMS administrator and InnovAge board member Tom Scully takes pride in the fact participants have fewer ER visits and hospital admissions than people in traditional Medicare. We are left to wonder how many of these participants were deprived of medically necessary care when InnovAge kept them out of the ER and the hospital.

    Where’s the oversight of InnovAge and other for-profit PACE programs you might wonder? Notwithstanding oversight requirements, precious little monitoring and reporting has occurred.

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  • US House passes Build Back Better Act

    US House passes Build Back Better Act

    Last week, the US House of Representatives passed the Build Back Better Act, legislation designed to improve the lives of tens of millions of Americans. The Senate still needs to pass the bill before President Biden can sign it into law. In all likelihood, the Senate will water it down some. But, as it stands, here’s what it will do to reduce the cost of health care for people with Medicare and all Americans:

    1. It strengthens Medicaid to cover more home and community-based services. Millions of people with Medicare who also have Medicaid can benefit from this provision. Medicare only covers home care in limited situations, for people who need skilled nursing or therapy services on an intermittent basis.
    2. It adds a hearing benefit to Medicare. If passed, Medicare would cover audiology services and hearing aids.
    3. It allows Medicare to negotiate the price of some popular high-cost prescription drugs that have been on the market for at least nine years. Over time, Medicare would negotiate the price of up to 60 prescription drugs.
    4. It caps out-of-pocket costs in Medicare Part D, outpatient prescription drug coverage, at $2,000 a year.
    5. It caps the coinsurance cost of insulin for people with Medicare and people with private insurance at $35 a month.
    6. It limits the amount pharmaceutical companies can raise prices on their drugs from one year to the next to no more than the rate of inflation.
    7. It helps low-income people in the 12 states that have not expanded Medicaid access health insurance coverage through their state health insurance exchanges at low or minimal cost.

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