Benefits
- West Virginia's Medicaid Redesign: What is the Impact on Children?
Joan Alker, Center for Children and Families
August 2008
The stated goal of West Virginia’s Medicaid Redesign was to improve the
health of beneficiaries by promoting healthy behaviors such as smoking
cessation, regular doctor visits, and weight loss. Parents of children
who receive health care coverage under Medicaid, even if they aren’t
eligible themselves, must sign an agreement or their children will
automatically be assigned to the basic plan with reduced benefits.
Because so few families have successfully executed the agreement, West
Virginia’s changes have resulted in limiting benefits, primarily for
children, with no real impact on improving health or promoting healthy
behavior.
- The Enhanced Benefits Rewards Program: Is it Changing the Way Medicaid Beneficiaries Approach Their Health?
Joan Alker and Jack Hoadley, Georgetown University Health Policy Institute
July 2008
A key feature of Florida's Medicaid Reform pilot is the Enhanced
Benefits Rewards Program which provides each Medicaid beneficiary up to
$125 a year in credits for certain healthy behaviors, such as keeping a
doctor’s appointment. The credits may be applied to the purchase of
health and personal care products at participating pharmacies. This
policy brief analyzes the program reporting that it has has been
expensive to launch and slow to catch on, raising questions about its
effectiveness and efficiency. It reports that though beneficiaries have
earned $12.5 million in credits, only about 10 percent of those credits
have been spent.
- EPSDT at 40: Modernizing a Pediatric Health Policy to Reflect a Changing Health Care System
Sara Rosenbaum, Sara Wilensky, and Kamala Allen, Center for Health Care Strategies
July 2008
This report examines the continuing role of Medicaid's EPSDT benefit in a changing health care system. Part I provides an overview of EPSDT, including information about the flexibility provided by the DRA, and also details state practices in implementing EPSDT benefits within managed care arrangements. Part II synthesizes the findings of an expert workgroup convened by the Center for Health Care Strategies to identify promising approaches for modernizing EPSDT to better meet the needs of children and families in today's health care system. The report concludes with opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in modernizing EPSDT, both in states that use managed care purchasing arrangements and in states that move toward greater use of DRA flexibility.
- Advancing Efficient Management and Purchasing of Prescription Drugs in Medicaid
Jeffrey S. Crowley and Edwin Park, Center for Children and Families
March 2008
This paper puts forward state and federal approaches to help manage prescription drugs efficiently and ensure that Medicaid gets the best possible price on prescription drugs while maintaining access to needed drugs for Medicaid beneficiaries.
- The Illusion of Choice: Vulnerable Medicaid Beneficiaries Being Placed in Scaled-Back "Benchmark" Benefit Packages
Judith Solomon, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
September 2006
This report provides information on The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, which allows states to vary the benefit packages they offer to some groups of Medicaid beneficiaries. It reports that states can require most children and parents to enroll in new “benchmark” benefit packages that do not provide all the benefits covered by regular Medicaid.
- West Virginia's Medicaid Changes Unlikely to Reduce State Costs or Improve Beneficiaries' Health
Judith Solomon, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
May 2006
The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 gives states new options to scale back health-care benefits for children and parents enrolled in Medicaid. This report reviews West Virginia's federal approval to provide a scaled-back basic benefit package for most children and parents in its Medicaid program, while giving them access to an “enhanced” benefit package if they sign and conform to an agreement with the state.
- Differences That Make A Difference: Comparing Medicaid and SCHIP Benefit Standards
Cindy Mann and Elizabeth Kenney, Center for Children and Families
October 2005
This issue brief analyzes the differences between Medicaid and SCHIP’s
benefit standards. It reviews the health care guarantees that children
would lose if the Medicaid standard were replaced by SCHIP-like rules.This issue brief analyzes the differences between Medicaid and SCHIP’s
benefit standards. It reviews the health care guarantees that children
would lose if the Medicaid standard were replaced by SCHIP-like rules.
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Coordination
(Additional information on Coordinating Medicaid and SCHIP is available in the Strategy Center.)
- New Research Shows Simplifying Medicaid Can Reduce Children’s Hospitalizations
Leighton Ku, Center On Budget And Policy Priorities
June 2007
This brief reports on new research that indicates that increasing the continuity of children’s Medicaid coverage reduces subsequent hospitalizations for chronic health conditions like asthma or diabetes. The research—a new study conducted by Dr. Andrew Bindman and his associates at the University of California at San Francisco—indicates that improving the continuity of Medicaid coverage through 12-month continuous eligibility can improve children’s health and avert unnecessary hospitalization costs.
- The Impact of Program Structure on Children’s Disenrollment from Medicaid and SCHIP
Benjamin D. Sommers, Health Affairs
November 2005
This report reviews the impact of program structure on children’s disenrollment from Medicaid and SCHIP. It finds that states with combined Medicaid/SCHIP programs experience an annual dropout rate of 9.6 percent, compared with 13.9 percent in states with separate programs. Having separate programs increases the risk of drop out by 45 percent. The attached file is an abstract of the article. Order the publication on the publisher's Web site.
- The Effects of State Policy Design Features on Take-UP and Crowd-Out Rates for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program
Cynthia Bansak and Steven Raphael , Journal of Policy Analysis and Management
June 2005
This report reviews whether SCHIP programs that are separate from the state Medicaid program is associated have lower take-up rates. The authors found that separate programs were associated with take-up rates 8 to 10 percentage points lower than those for combined programs. The attached file is an abstract of the article. Order the publication on the publisher's Web site.
- Simplifying Children’s Medicaid And SCHIP
Karl Kronebusch and Brian Elbel, Health Affairs
May 2004
This report reviews whether a state using SCHIP funds for a Medicaid expansion has an enrollment advantage over a state that has a combination Medicaid/SCHIP program or a separate SCHIP program. The authors find that states using Medicaid expansions have higher enrollment levels—an increase of 2.7 percentage points compared with combination programs and 2 percentage points compared with separate SCHIP programs. These results may be due to the advantages Medicaid affords as an administrative model including the potential for better continuity and more seamless integration of enrollment for agency staff, who are required to screen SCHIP applicants for Medicaid eligibility, as well as for recipients who potentially shift between programs when family income changes. Finally, outreach efforts oriented around SCHIP will automatically apply to Medicaid under a Medicaid expansion.
- Enrolling Children in Public Insurance: SCHIP, Medicaid, and State Implementation
Karl Kronebusch and Brian Elbel, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
January 2004
This report finds that states utilizing Medicaid expansions have higher enrollment levels—an increase of 2.7 percentage points compared to combination programs and an increase of 3.3 percentage points compared to separate SCHIP programs. The advantage for the Medicaid expansion is found at all levels of income and is a little larger for those with relatively higher incomes (i.e., between 50 and 250 percent of the federal poverty level), which is the opposite of the fear that higher income recipients would feel more anti-Medicaid stigma.
The attached file is an abstract of the article. Order the publication on the publisher's Web site.
- Continuing the Progress: Enrolling and Retaining Low-Income Families and Children in Health Care Coverage
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
August 2001
This guide by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
provides information on federal rules to enroll and retain low-income
families and children in health care coverage.
- Making the Link: Strategies for Coordinating Publicly Funded Health Care Coverage for Children
Cindy Mann, Donna Cohen Ross and Laura Cox, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
February 2000
Many states have expanded SCHIP coverage for children through a separate child health program, either exclusively or in combination with a Medicaid expansion. Each of these states, as well as those that create separate child health programs, needs to devise strategies for coordinating the new coverage program with Medicaid. This report discusses some administrative strategies, including one program name and enrollment simplifications, which could promote coordination.
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Crowd-Out
(Additional information on Addressing Crowd-Out is available in the Strategy Center.)
- Revisiting Crowd-Out
Lynn Blewett and Kathleen Call, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
September 2007
This update to an earlier report discusses
crowd-out and its implications, highlighting findings from recent studies. Crowd-out estimates range from near zero to
60%, depending on the population studied and the methodology used, and are
higher-income children. Recent efforts
to reduce crowd-out, such as waiting periods and higher premiums, have been
shown to discourage enrollment in public programs by both the privately-insured
and the uninsured. The brief also
discusses the role of the availability and affordability of employer-sponsored
insurance in maintaining private coverage.
- SCHIP at 10: A Synthesis of the Evidence on Substitution of SCHIP for Other Coverage
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
September 2007
Prepared for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) as part of the Congressionally mandated evaluation of SCHIP, this report reviews the research on crowd out after 10 years of experience with SCHIP and presents new data collected as part of the larger evaluation.
- Who's Counting? What is Crowd-Out, How Big is It, and Does it Matter for SCHIP?
Alliance for Health Reform
August 2007
As Congress debated SCHIP reauthorization in 2007, there was much discussion on the crowd-out effects of SCHIP. This briefing in August 2007, provided an overview of the issue in the context of the current debate.
A transcript of the briefing is provided; for additional resources, see the Alliance for Health Reform.
- The State Children's Health Insurance Program
Congressional Budget Office
May 2007
This report outlines the design and financing structure of SCHIP and
synthesizes findings on the effect of the program on children’s health
coverage. The findings indicate that SCHIP has contributed to a decline in the
uninsured rate of low-income children, SCHIP’s target population, and concludes
that crowd-out of private coverage under SCHIP is most likely between 25 and
50% of the increase in public coverage.
- Substitution of SCHIP for Private Coverage: Results from a 2002 Evaluation in 10 States
Anna Sommers, Stephen Zuckerman, Lisa Dubay, and Genevieve Kenney, Health Affairs
April 2007
This article examines the extent to which enrollees in SCHIP have dropped private insurance to enroll in public coverage. The analysis shows that only 28% of SCHIP enrollees had private coverage in the six months prior to enrolling in the program. About half of these enrollees lost private coverage involuntarily, implying that 14% of all SCHIP enrollees had private coverage that they could have retained, but many report it is unaffordable.
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Retention
(Additional information on Maintaining Coverage for Children is available in the Strategy Center.)
- The Effect of Renewal Policy Changes on SCHIP Disenrollment
Jill Herndon, et al., Health Services Research
June 2008
To examine the impact of changing from a passive renewal process to an active renewal process in Florida's State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) on disenrollment, the researchers looked at administrative records, containing enrollment and demographic data, from January 2004 through February 2006. Children faced almost a 10-fold greater risk of disenrolling in their renewal month under active renewal than under passive renewal. They did not detect differential impacts of the policy change across children with different health status levels.
- New Research Shows Simplifying Medicaid Can Reduce Children’s Hospitalizations
Leighton Ku, Center On Budget And Policy Priorities
June 2007
This brief reports on new research that indicates that increasing the continuity of children’s Medicaid coverage reduces subsequent hospitalizations for chronic health conditions like asthma or diabetes. The research—a new study conducted by Dr. Andrew Bindman and his associates at the University of California at San Francisco—indicates that improving the continuity of Medicaid coverage through 12-month continuous eligibility can improve children’s health and avert unnecessary hospitalization costs.
- Harnessing Technology to Improve Medicaid and SCHIP Enrollment and Retention Practices
Beth Morrow and Dawn Horner, The Children's Partnership and Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
May 2007
Children fail to enroll and/or lose coverage primarily due to misinformation, difficult enrollment and renewal procedures, and inefficient administrative practices. This report explores how technological innovations can be applied to remove these impediments for Medicaid and SCHIP enrollment and retention, while at the same time making the programs more efficient.
- Promising Practices from the Nation's Single Largest Effort to Insure Eligible Children and Adults Through Public Health
Covering Kids and Families National Program Office and the Southern Institute on Children and Families
April 2007
This report illustrates the many creative and collaborative ways the Covering Kids & Families coalitions worked to break down barriers to public health coverage for low-income children and adults. From 1997-2002, these coalitions encouraged the adoption of outreach, simplification, and coordination strategies across the states.
- Seven Steps Toward State Success in Covering Children Continuously
Uchenna A. Ukaegbu and Sonya Schwartz, National Academy for State Health Policy and Lake Snell Perry & Associates
October 2006
In March 2006, the National Academy for State Health Policy convened a small symposium on child health coverage consisting of state and national public and private sector experts on child health coverage. This brief summarizes key suggestions which emerged during the symposium discussion about lessons learned over the past decade of state efforts to increase rates of child health coverage. Meeting highlights are supplemented with additional information from the current literature, and examples from states.
- Instability of Public Health Insurance Coverage
Laura Summer and Cindy Mann, The Commonwealth Fund
June 2006
This report examines the extent, causes, and consequences of
instability in public coverage programs for children and families,
focusing particularly on the phenomenon of “churning,” which occurs
when individuals lose and regain coverage in a short period of time. It
also provides strategies that can make public program coverage more
stable.
- How Much Does Churning in Medi-Cal Cost?
Gerry Fairbrother, The California Endowment
April 2005
This report reviews the impact of "churning" in California. It finds that over 600,000 children enrolled in Medicaid (Medi-Cal in
California) in 2003 had been disenrolled from the program within a three-year
period, only to be later re-enrolled. It cost California over $120
million to re-process these eligible Medi-Cal children.
- Is There a Hole in the Bucket? Understanding SCHIP Retention
Ian Hill and Amy Westpfahl Lutzky, Urban Institute
May 2003
Even as states made headway in enrolling eligible children, anecdotal evidence emerged as early as mid-1999 that large proportions of SCHIP enrollees were losing eligibility, or disenrolling, at the end of their period of coverage. The Urban institute collected information from eight states about their application and eligibility redetermination processes under SCHIP, as well as data on the outcomes of these processes. This report focuses on our findings related to retention.
- Staying Covered: The Importance Of Retaining Health Insurance For Low-Income Families
Leighton Ku and Donna Cohen Ross, The Commonwealth Fund
December 2002
This report examines reasons why many low-income individuals lose coverage, the effects of insurance loss, and strategies that can help people retain coverage. It shows that every person with public or private coverage at the beginning of a given year retained coverage throughout the next 12 months, the number of low-income children who are uninsured would decline by close to two-fifths over the course of a year. The number of uninsured low-income adults would decline by more than one-quarter.
- Consequences of States’ Policies for SCHIP Disenrollment
Andrew W. Dick, R. Andrew Allison, Susan G. Haber, Cindy Brach, and Eliz, Health Care Financing Review
March 2002
This issue brief reports on a study of disenrollment from SCHIP by the Child Health Insurance Research Initiative (CHIRI). Looking at disenrollment in Florida, Kansas, New York, and Oregon the authors found that the administrative requirements imposed by states at renewal lead a large share of children to be dropped from coverage. In particular, results show that there is a strong and large association between disenrollment and recertification and that states without passive re-enrollment, approximately one-half of those enrolled at the
time dropped out of SCHIP.
- Why Eligible Children Lose or Leave SCHlP: Findings From A Comprehensive Study Of Retention And Disenrollment
Trish Riley, Cynthia Pernice,Michael Perry and Susan Kannel, National Academy for State Health Policy and Lake Snell Perry & Associates
February 2002
NASHP—with seven states, Alabama, Arizona, California, Georgia, Iowa, New Jersey, and Utah—undertook a project to examine SCHIP disenrollment and how to retain enrollment of those children who continued to be eligible for the program but failed to complete the renewal process or make their premium payments. It provides results from a telephone survey of parents of current SCHIP enrollees and those those who have a lapse in coverage.
- Continuing the Progress: Enrolling and Retaining Low-Income Families and Children in Health Care Coverage
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
August 2001
This guide by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
provides information on federal rules to enroll and retain low-income
families and children in health care coverage.
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