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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, May 26 2015

CMS Releases Regulations To Overhaul Medicaid Managed Care

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services unveiled Tuesday nearly 700 pages of long-anticipated rules that will impact millions of Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries currently enrolled in managed care organizations, as well as stakeholders like health care providers, insurers and state agencies. The federal regulations have not been updated since 2002.

Kaiser Health News: ‘Milestone’ Rules Would Limit Profits, Score Quality For Medicaid Plans

Sweeping proposals disclosed Tuesday would create profit guidelines for private Medicaid plans as well as new standards for the plans’ doctor and hospital networks and rules to coordinate Medicaid insurance more closely with other coverage. “We are taking steps to align how these programs work,” said Andy Slavitt, acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which proposed the rules. Privatized Medicaid has grown rapidly as budget-pinched states have responded to commercial insurers’ promise to deliver care for a fixed price. Most beneficiaries of Medicaid — state programs for the poor run partly with federal dollars — now get care through contracted insurers. (Hancock, 5/26)

Document: Download 653-Page Rule (PDF)

National Journal: The Obama Administration’s New Medicaid Rule Has Health Plans Fuming

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services unveiled reams of proposed managed care rules for the low-income insurance program; this is the first time that the agency is revising the regulations since 2002. They cover everything from network adequacy and beneficiary protections to long-term care, which is new ground for federal regulations. But managed care companies, private health plans that cover Medicaid enrollees while receiving a per-member payment from the government, had been bracing for one proposal in particular: Medical-loss ratio. Medical-loss ratio says that health plans have to spend a certain percentage of money that they are paid on actual health care. (Scott, 5/26)

Bloomberg: Insurers Face Tighter Oversight Of Medicaid Plans In Proposal

In the first major overhaul in more than a decade, the U.S. has proposed new rules for private health insurers who run Medicaid plans covering millions of poor people and children. The proposed rules, issued Tuesday, call for plans to report what portion of the money they collect to care for patients actually gets spent on benefits. They would attempt to broaden access to doctors and hospitals by having states set standards on access to care. The rules would also create a performance-based ratings system for plans. (Tracer, 5/26)

Modern Healthcare: Sweeping Medicaid Rule Targets Enrollment Boom In Private Plans

The CMS has released a sweeping proposed rule intended to modernize the regulation of Medicaid managed-care plans. Medicaid managed-care enrollment has soared by 48% to 46 million beneficiaries over the past four years, according to consulting firm Avalere. By the end of this year, Avalere estimates that 73% of Medicaid beneficiaries will receive services through managed-care plans. (Dickson, 5/26)

The Hill: Feds Unveil Long-Awaited Overhaul Of Medicaid Managed Care

The Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services (CMS) is proposing that Medicaid managed care groups align their standards with those in the private marketplace to create more uniform practices across states. Those changes will help to “ease the administrative burden on issuers and regulators” while also providing “an appropriate level of protection for enrollees,” CMS wrote in the rules. But the proposed rule is likely to draw fire from many of the 39 states that have enjoyed considered leeway in their own use of managed care. (Ferris, 5/26)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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