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  • States Should Continue Medicaid and CHIP Improvements Achieved Through State Disaster SPAs Beyond PHE

    Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, states have been utilizing Medicaid and CHIP disaster state plan amendments (SPAs) for temporary, additional flexibilities to respond to the challenges resulting from the pandemic. As the administration considers when to end the federally declared Public Health Emergency (PHE), states and stakeholders should think about how to continue…

  • How the COVID-19 Pandemic Affected U.S. National Health Spending

    The Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has recently issued updated National Health Expenditure (NHE) estimates for 2020.  The key takeaway is that the 2020 data offers little insight into future national health care spending trends, due to the “unprecedented government response to the global pandemic” and the…

  • Biden Administration and States Should Better Ensure Medicaid and CHIP Beneficiaries Have Access to At-Home COVID-19 Rapid Tests

    As the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) recently explained, state Medicaid and CHIP programs are required to cover at-home COVID-19 rapid tests, without cost-sharing, until at least one year after the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency.  However, there seems to be substantial variation across state Medicaid and CHIP programs in how they actually cover…

  • Georgia Drops the Ball on Health Care, Again

    Faced with an easy opportunity to dramatically improve the lives of Georgians, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp has snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. On January 21, 2022, instead of moving forward with a backup plan to help over 400,000 Georgians get health insurance, Governor Kemp decided to file a lawsuit. It’s not the first…

  • CMS Commits $49 Million to Connect Kids, Parents, and Pregnant People to Coverage

    A wide range of organizations, including state/local governments, tribal entities, safety net providers, non-profits, schools, and others, may apply for up to $1.5 million over three years to connect eligible people to Medicaid or CHIP under a new CMS funding opportunity. A total of $49.4 million in funding will build on efforts initiated by the…

  • Medicaid Wars: The Unwinding at the One Year Mark (Episode V)

    In its first twelve months, the Biden administration has been unwinding the anti-Medicaid actions taken by its predecessor. The unwinding has been slow and methodical, and it is not yet finished. In part, this is because the new management at CMS has necessarily been focused on responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and in part because…

  • The Proper Use of Medicaid Improper Payment Rates

    For the first time, CMS has posted state-specific rates of improper payments in Medicaid. This welcome exercise in transparency is a sea change in the Payment Error Rate Measurement (PERM) program, which CMS has been using since 2007 to help states improve the accuracy of their Medicaid payments.  Until now, CMS has been reporting only…

  • Fixing the Family Glitch and Other Priorities: The Next Wave of Federal Administrative Action to Enhance the Affordable Care Act

    Last year was a busy time for health policy. After a change in administration in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we saw numerous federal policy changes to strengthen the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and Medicaid program. Policymakers weren’t going it alone; stakeholders weighed in on health policy priorities, outlining administrative actions to increase access…

  • California’s Medicaid Managed Care Waiver: New Potential for Access and Transparency

    One of the most significant Medicaid managed care developments in 2021 happened on December 29, when CMS approved federal funding and waivers for California’s reform initiative, Advancing Innovation in Medi-Cal (CalAIM).  The approval involved two sets of waivers, one operating under section 1115 of the Social Security Act, the other under section 1915(b)(4). For good…

  • Secretary Becerra Extends the PHE: What Does This Mean for Medicaid and the Continuous Enrollment Provision?

    [Editor’s Note: Read the latest on the public health emergency Medicaid continuous coverage protection here.] Earlier today, HHS Secretary Becerra renewed the COVID-related public health emergency (PHE). The latest extension will expire on April 16, 2022. By law, public health emergencies are declared in 90-day increments. The current PHE ends January 16, 2022, so a 90-day…

  • Biden Administration Says No to Premiums in Medicaid

    Just before the end of the year, the Biden Administration took an important stand protecting people enrolled in Medicaid. Three states (AR, GA, and MT) received news from CMS the week before Christmas on section 1115 Medicaid waiver requests of various kinds – but with one common element – that their plans to charge premiums…

  • Research Update: New Urban Institute Report Highlights Pandemic-Related Barriers to Health Care Among Low-Income Parents

    Parents’ lack of health insurance coverage and access to health services can reduce children’s access to care and harm their families’ broader financial health. This is why the Urban Institute’s new report on coverage, access, overall health, and ability to meet family financial needs among parents at different income levels after the first year of…

  • Comments on Georgia Access Model Section 1332 Waiver Comments

    Georgetown University Center for Children and Families submitted the following comments on Georgia’s section 1332 waiver. Georgetown Univesity CCF Comments on GA 1332 01.07.2022

  • CMS Releases Guidance on New Medicaid Mobile Crisis Services Option

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services kept busy over the holidays with the release of new guidance to states on the American Rescue Plan Act’s new Medicaid state option to provide qualifying community-based mobile crisis intervention services.  As discussed here on Say Ahhh!, ARPA included a provision allowing state Medicaid programs to provide community-based…

  • Comments on Oregon Health Plan 1115 Demonstration Waiver Renewal and Amendment

    Georgetown University Center for Children and Families submitted the following comments on the draft renewal application for the “Oregon Health Plan” 1115 demonstration waiver. FINAL Georgetown CCF Oregon Comments

  • Comments on Proposed Withdrawal or Repeal of the SUNSET Rule

    Georgetown University Center for Children and Families submitted the following comments to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on the proposed rule, 86 FR 59906 (October 29, 2021), to withdraw or repeal the “Securing Updated and Necessary Statutory Evaluations Timely” (SUNSET) final rule published on January 19, 2021. CCF SUNSET Repeal Comments

  • Texas Medicaid Section 1115 Waiver Drama: A Trilogy

    The world of Section 1115 Medicaid waivers can be mysterious and weedy, arcane and annoying, boring and, at times, dramatic. And in recent years, the use of Section 1115 authority by the Trump Administration stretched all previously known boundaries and wound up in court on multiple occasions  – most famously in the Arkansas work requirements…

  • Oregon’s Waiver Proposal: Continuous Eligibility for Young Children as a School Readiness Tool, But Why Not EPSDT?

    As my colleagues blogged last week, Oregon released its 1115 waiver proposal for state public comment, which included precedent-setting concerns and innovations. We were pleased to see multi-year continuous eligibility included—up to five years for children under age 6, and two years for ages 6 and older. While a few states are in various stages…

  • Medicaid Managed Care in 2021: The Year that Was

    The Medicaid managed care ecosystem is huge and complex. (If you need a primer, the health policy podcast Tradeoffs has a short and entertaining one). As of March of this year, forty states and the District of Columbia were contracting with over 280 different managed care organizations (MCOs). The federal government and states combined spend…

  • Research Update: More than 1 in 3 Children Lacked Access to Adequate Coverage in 2019

    Regular readers know that, since record lows in 2016, child uninsurance has been climbing in recent years. Regular readers also know that uninsured rates don’t give a full picture of children’s coverage. Similar to our recent paper on kids who experience coverage gaps, a new article in Pediatrics shows that just having some health insurance…