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  • CMS Posts May 2023 Unwinding Data

    In this snapshot dated August 2023, CMS reports on certain unwinding metrics based on May 2023 data. Those metrics include: Percent and number monthly change in total Medicaid enrollment; Current month and monthly change in applications processed over 45 days;  Current month and monthly change in average call time; and Current month and monthly change…

  • Breaking News: CMS Reveals States Are Incorrectly Processing Ex Parte Renewals; Kids Are Most at Risk

    Today, CMS released troubling information. Based on the agency’s monitoring of the unwinding of the COVID-related Medicaid continuous enrollment requirement, CMS found that many states are conducting ex parte renewals incorrectly. As a result, many children and other enrollees are or could soon be losing their Medicaid coverage when the state had information that they…

  • Statement by Joan Alker on Biden Administration Medicaid Ex Parte Announcement

    The following is a statement by Joan Alker, executive director of the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families in response to Biden Administration letter to states requiring Medicaid ex parte renewal fixes and reinstatement of children and others impacted. “Children are especially at risk during the current process of checking eligibility for everyone covered…

  • Medicaid Coverage for Pregnant Women and Their Young Children Linked to Health of the Next Generation

    As we see increasing numbers of pregnant women and newborns being disenrolled from Medicaid, a new study adds to evidence of long-term benefits of Medicaid investments– this time for the grandchildren and children of pregnant women and their newborns. For many years, CCF has highlighted the growing research on the long-term health and educational impacts…

  • “Deemed Newborns:” Collateral Damage in the PHE Unwinding

    This blog is about the babies on the bus.  You know, the ones who go “Wah-Wah-Wah” all around the town. It seems that, in the course of the PHE unwinding, some of them are getting thrown under the bus. As my colleague Elisabeth Wright Burak recently reported, Arkansas disenrolled 3,300 newborns from Medicaid in April;…

  • How Would Medicaid Expansion Help Rural Communities in 10 Holdout States?

    Last week, my colleague Joan Alker announced the publication of our latest report on the importance of Medicaid in rural areas and small towns around the country. She covered how as states “unwind” pandemic-era Medicaid continuous coverage protections, the reach of Medicaid in rural areas means negative effects there can be quite significant if states…

  • Transitional Medical Assistance (TMA): Extending Medicaid Coverage for Working Parents

    Terminations of Medicaid eligibility are much in the news these days.  While the large majority of disenrollments to date have been for procedural reasons, there are individuals who have been disenrolled after a state Medicaid agency has actually made a determination that the individual is ineligible.  In these situations, the agency is required to determine…

  • New Brief: Where Things Stand on the Medicaid and CHIP Provisions of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act

    Medicaid (alongside the Children’s Health Insurance Program) covers more than half of all children in the U.S. and serves as the single largest payer of behavioral health services. Yet, timely access to mental health services remains elusive for many children and families. In June 2022, President Biden signed into law the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act…

  • Why Are So Many Kids Losing Medicaid Coverage?

    At the end of the COVID pandemic, more than half (54%) of the nation’s children were covered by Medicaid or CHIP; the vast majority by Medicaid. So, the lifting of the pandemic-related Medicaid continuous enrollment protection this spring is a really big deal, putting low-income children at risk of losing access to health care and/or…

  • Medicaid Provision of Draft House Drug Shortages Bill Raises Concerns

    This year, there has been renewed focus in Congress on how to address the ongoing problem of drug shortages, especially with cancer patients now facing severe shortages of widely used generic chemotherapy drugs.  On July 28, 2023, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers unveiled a draft bill intended to address the “root…

  • The Biden Administration CMS Unwinds the Tennessee “Block Grant”

    Two and a half years ago, on January 8, 2021, with considerable fanfare, the Trump administration CMS announced the approval of a Medicaid “aggregate cap waiver” for Tennessee.  The Governor was more forthcoming, trumpeting the state’s receipt of a “block grant waiver.”  You say “aggregate cap,” I say “block grant,” let’s call the whole thing…

  • Medicaid’s Role in Rural Areas Has Grown: Families Have Much at Stake in the Unwinding

    In 2017 we published our first report examining the role of Medicaid in rural areas. We’ve updated the data a few times and our newest look is based on Medicaid coverage in 2020-2021. The data underscores the outsize importance of Medicaid as a source of health insurance coverage in rural areas and small towns –…

  • Medicaid’s Coverage Role in Small Towns and Rural Areas

    Medicaid’s vital role as an insurer for low-income families, people with disabilities and chronic health conditions, and individuals in need of long-term services and supports in the nation’s health care system has continued to grow over the past decade. According to federal administrative enrollment data, one-quarter of all residents of the United States and more…

  • Community Health Workers & Medicaid: Advancing Health Equity Depends on State Implementation

    As National Community Health Worker Awareness Week approaches at the end of August, we want to take stock of the advances in Medicaid’s role in financing community health worker (CHW) services and the road ahead. CHWs have a long history of supporting community public health by engaging individuals in communities that the traditional health system…

  • Senate Finance Committee PBM Legislation Includes Sound Medicaid Drug Pricing Provisions

    On July 26, 2023, on a 26-1 bipartisan vote, the Senate Finance Committee approved the Modernizing and Ensuring PBM Accountability Act.  The bill includes a number of  Medicare provisions related to pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and pharmacies but also includes two sound Medicaid provisions related to “spread pricing” in Medicaid managed care and to Medicaid…

  • New Inspector General Report Finds Manufacturers Would Have to Pay Substantial Rebates if the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program Applied to Separate State CHIP Programs

    The Office of Inspector General (OIG) at the Department of Health and Human Services issued a new report estimating that applying the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program (MDRP) to separate state CHIP programs would have resulted in drug manufacturers paying $641.2 million in rebates in calendar year 2020 alone, with the federal government receiving $515.7 million…

  • 2023 Medicaid and CHIP Snapshot Data Sources

    Names of Medicaid and CHIP Programs State-specific names for Medicaid and CHIP programs (as of September 2023) can be found at HealthCare.gov –  Medicaid and CHIP program names in your state. Medicaid/CHIP Enrollees The share of Medicaid/CHIP enrollees in the child, adult, disability, and senior eligibility groups calculated from MACStats: Medicaid and CHIP Data Book,…