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Arkansas

  • Arkansas Medicaid Waiver Agreement Approved

    So interesting things always happen on Fridays, I have noticed. This Friday, the week before open enrollment begins, was already pretty hopping when word came that federal CMS had approved Arkansas’ Section 1115 Medicaid waiver request to provide coverage to an estimated 200,000 adults through qualified health plans offered in the Arkansas Health Connector, the state’s health insurance…

  • Medicaid Expansion Round 2: From Simplicity to Complexity

    As a practical matter, I think accepting 100% federal funding to extend Medicaid coverage to adults and getting that coverage up and running is easier than setting up a state-based marketplace, implementing the new insurance reforms and tax credits etc etc. States obviously already have Medicaid programs up and running – in many cases with…

  • I Support Arkansas’ Effort to Move Forward (But Am Holding My Nose)

    So I just skimmed through the Arkansas Section 1115 Medicaid waiver application,which was submitted to the federal government a few days ago. This proposal is unique and uses Medicaid funding to buy coverage in the new marketplace through a premium assistance arrangement. I AM happy that Arkansas legislators and the Governor were sensible enough to…

  • Arkansas Medicaid is Containing Costs Effectively so Why Go Private?

    Just saw an interesting press release from Arkansas Medicaid agency on July 12th which says that “Arkansas Medicaid finished State Fiscal Year 2013 just 1.5 percent over the previous year’s spending, marking the program’s lowest annual growth rate in more than three decades.” Thanks to Dylan Scott’s article in Governing Magazine for calling this to…

  • CMS Issues Final Rule on New Premium Assistance Option

    As my diligent colleague Tricia Brooks reported, CMS issued an important final rule on July 5th  that we have been expecting for some time. While the rule did not finalize a number of issues, it did include slightly revised rules for states interested in pursuing premium assistance in the individual market – sort of a hot…

  • CMS Clarified Enrollment Caps in Medicaid Waivers Will Not be Permitted

    The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued questions and answers today which, among other things, clarified that Section 1115 waiver requests that include enrollment caps or similar policies would not be approved going forward. CMS notes that such policies do not “further the objectives of the program.” Background note here, Section 1115 Secretarial…

  • On Medicaid and ACA, Arkansas Lawmakers Choose Practical Step Forward Over Ideological Objections

    All eyes— again! — have been on my home state of Arkansas this week as the General Assembly late yesterday passed the “private option,” aka the “Arkansas Plan,” or using Medicaid funds to buy exchange coverage for 250,000 uninsured Arkansans starting next year. This was no small feat, given the structural and political barriers at…

  • CMS Issues Guidance on Arkansas Type Premium Assistance Plans

    So as Tricia Brooks blogged about yesterday while I was taking the day off, CMS issued some interesting Q and A’s  last Friday on how a state might consider taking a premium assistance approach to expanding their Medicaid program.  The Q and A’s, to my mind, were a helpful contribution to the ongoing discussions in…

  • CMS Q&A Shines Light on “Arkansas Plan”

    Just in time for the holiday weekend, CMS issued a Q&A regarding the state option to expand Medicaid by using premium assistance to buy coverage through a qualified health plan in the new insurance marketplaces. Over the past few weeks, “the Arkansas plan” worked itself into a media frenzy and had Medicaid stakeholders concerned over…

  • New Resource Looks at Premium Assistance Options in Medicaid/CHIP

    Yesterday my new report for the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured was released called Premium Assistance in Medicaid and CHIP: An Overview of Current Options and Implications of the Affordable Care Act.  The paper examines how statutory changes in the Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act and the Affordable Care Act have changed…

  • Replacing ARKids First with Exchange Coverage Would Put Children – and Arkansas’s Success – at Risk

    Like most health policy folks, I have been watching developments in my home state of Arkansas with much interest.  Recent media reports have discussed interest among state leaders to use Medicaid to purchase plans on the exchange, also known as the marketplace that will make private insurance available to many uninsured Arkansans starting next year…

  • Getting Into Gear for 2014: Findings from a 50-State Survey of Eligibility, Enrollment, Renewal, and Cost-Sharing Policies in Medicaid and CHIP, 2012-2013

    As 2013 begins, implementation of the major provisions of the ACA, including its coverage expansions, is less than a year away. Following the Supreme Court ruling to uphold the ACA and the 2012 elections, efforts to prepare for 2014 are moving into high gear in many states. The majority of states are capitalizing on web-based…

  • Uninsured Children 2009-2011: Charting the Nation’s Progress

    Georgetown University Center for Children and Families researchers analyzed health insurance data from the Census Bureau’s annual American Community Survey to get a closer look at children’s coverage trends. The authors found that the nation continues to make steady progress covering children, despite no re­duction in the number of children living in poverty. A strong commitment to…

  • New Issue Brief Focuses on State Action to Promote Child-Only Coverage

    Editor’s Note:  This blog originally appeared in the CHIRblog, a blog focused on health insurance coverage, insurance markets, and how people are affected by insurance reform. By Katie Keith, Georgetown University Center on Health Insurance Reforms Today, the Commonwealth Fund released a new issue brief on the availability of child-only policies. The issue brief is part of an ongoing series by CHIR on…

  • State Fact Sheets Highlight Importance of Medicaid Coverage for Children

    By Ielnaz Kashefipour, American Academy of Pediatrics The American Academy of Pediatrics, in partnership with the Children’s Hospitals Association (formerly NACHRI), this week produced updated state-by-state fact sheets that explain the importance of the Medicaid program for children. These fact sheets are used in federal and state advocacy efforts to protect the Medicaid program from…

  • Medicaid Coverage for Parents under the Affordable Care Act – State Fact Sheets

    This issue brief presents national estimates of the number and characteristics of uninsured parents who would be eligible for Medicaid in 2014 according to whether they have child who is currently enrolled in Medicaid/CHIP coverage or an uninsured child who is eligible for Medicaid/CHIP but not enrolled. State-specific data are also provided on the ten…

  • ACA Protects and Improves Access to Preventive Care for Children

    Medicaid and CHIP have helped millions of children access preventive care at no cost to families. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) takes this commitment further by removing cost and coverage barriers that could deter families from taking full advantage of preventive care services in private insurance plans. Since becoming law, the ACA has helped maintain…

  • Performing Under Pressure: Annual Findings of a 50-State Survey of Eligibility, Enrollment, Renewal, and Cost-Sharing Policies in Medicaid and CHIP, 2011-2012

    Amid ongoing state budget pressures, a requirement in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that states maintain eligibility in Medicaid and CHIP was central in preserving coverage during 2011. In addition, more than half of states (29) made improvements in their programs. Most of these improvements involved greater use of technology to boost program efficiency and…

  • Despite Economic Challenges, Progress Continues: Children’s Health Insurance Coverage in the United States from 2008-2010

    In this paper, health insurance data from the Census Bureau’s annual “American Community Survey” was analyzed in order to get a more accurate depiction of children’s coverage. Even though the number of children living in poverty has increased almost 19 percent over a three-year period, the number of children without health insurance declined 14 percent–…

  • Exciting News About ARKIDS and Medicaid

    By Elisabeth Wright Burak, Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families Here’s a sneak peak at an exciting trend we’ve just uncovered in recent insurance coverage data. In a nutshell: the number of uninsured kids in Arkansas is dropping, even as families continue to feel the effects of the recession. As lawmakers debate the future of Medicaid…