Medicaid To Be Reinstated For Nearly 500,000 People Mistakenly Removed
Now 29 states and D.C. are scrambling to fix a computer system error that improperly evaluated people’s Medicaid eligibility, CMS announced Thursday. The glitch led to nearly 500,000 people, including many children, losing their insurance coverage.
The New York Times:
Nearly 500,000 In U.S. Will Regain Medicaid Coverage After State Errors
Nearly 500,000 people, many of them children, will keep Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program coverage after state officials discovered major errors in their procedures for reviewing program eligibility, federal officials said on Thursday. After a pandemic-era policy that guaranteed Medicaid coverage lapsed in April, states began checking to see whether tens of millions of Americans covered by the programs still qualified, removing them from the rolls if their incomes had surpassed program limits, among other reasons. (Weiland, 9/21)
The Washington Post:
Half A Million Children, Others Being Reinstated After Removal From Medicaid
The officials said Thursday that states are in the process of reinstating everyone who should not have been cut off from Medicaid. Daniel Tsai, the federal Medicaid director, said at least some states will be in position to resume all of their Medicaid unwinding, as the undertaking is known, by the end of this month. But he did not identify how many — or which — states are able to make rapid corrections, acknowledging that some will need months. (Goldstein, 9/21)
AP:
Medicaid Coverage Restored To About A Half-Million People After Computer Errors In Many States
In late August, CMS warned that some state computer systems were flagging entire households for further information — and dropping all family members when no one responded — instead of reviewing each individual separately and automatically renewing children who remain eligible. It sent letters to all states asking them to verify their compliance with federal rules. (Lieb, 9/21)
On Medicaid expansion —
AP:
Mississippi GOP Governor Says His Plan Would Aid Hospitals; Democrat Pushes For Medicaid Expansion
Mississippi Republican Gov. Tate Reeves released a proposal Thursday aimed at helping some of the state’s financially struggling hospitals, even as the Democrat who is trying to unseat him has spent months hammering Reeves for opposing Medicaid expansion in one of the poorest states in the nation. Hospitals would pay some higher taxes as a way to receive substantially more federal Medicaid money, Mississippi Medicaid director Drew Snyder said. Reeves said the changes are projected to generate $689 million, which would be split among hospitals. (Wagster Pettus, 9/21)
North Carolina Health News:
State Budget Heavy On Health Care Spending
It almost seemed anti-climatic Thursday afternoon and early Friday morning when lawmakers voted on the nearly $30 billion state budget. The spending plan — flush with hundreds of millions of dollars for mental and behavioral health care, a new children’s hospital “somewhere in the Triangle,” crisis pregnancy centers, a new rural health program, enhancements to the medical examiner and autopsy system, health care workforce incentives, Medicaid expansion and more — was approved along party lines with little fanfare. To make it official, one more vote is needed by the Senate today before the bill is sent to the governor. (Blythe and Hoban, 9/22)
And in other Medicaid news —
Stat:
Medicaid Pilot Uses Groceries To Boost Health, Lower Food Insecurity
Medicaid pilot program in food as medicine shows promise. Delivery service offers fresh fruits, vegetables to address diabetes, obesity, hypertension. (Yan, 9/22)
AP:
Over 200 People Are Homeless After Tucson Recovery Community Closes During Medicaid Probe
A huge addiction recovery community in Tucson, Arizona, shuttered suddenly this week, leaving more than 200 people homeless as Arizona investigates widespread Medicaid fraud largely affecting Native Americans, authorities said Thursday. (Snow, 9/21)
And more news from CMS —
Politico:
CMS Promises Stricter Oversight Of Medicare Advantage
A top official at CMS promised to get “tougher” on Medicare Advantage plans amid growing complaints about care denials and access. CMS Deputy Administrator Jon Blum discussed what he considers flaws in the growing program during a session Thursday at the National Association of ACOs’ fall conference in Washington. Blum’s remarks could belie CMS’ thinking on how to handle a program more than half of all Medicare beneficiaries participate in. (King, 9/21)
Modern Healthcare:
CMS Nursing Home Staffing Mandate Threatens 4,000 Michigan Beds
A proposed federal rule on minimum nursing home staffing could lead to the slashing of 4,000 patient beds in the state, according to the industry. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, issued the proposed rule earlier this month, establishing the minimum amount of time certified nurse aids and registered nurses must spend daily with nursing home patients. (9/21)