Millions Of Lower-Income People Expected To Shift Between Exchanges And Medicaid

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While government officials have spent months scrambling to fix the federal health law鈥檚 botched rollout, another issue is looming that could create new headaches for states, health plans 鈥 and patients.

In 2014, millions of people are expected to shift between the health exchanges and Medicaid, as their income fluctuates over the year. That could be costly for states and insurance companies, and patients could wind up having gaps in coverage or having to switch health plans or doctors.

The process 鈥 called 鈥渃hurning鈥 鈥 is common in Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor and disabled. Typically, people lose Medicaid eligibility after their income spikes temporarily, such as when they get a seasonal job or pick up extra hours at certain times of the year. They re-enroll when their income drops.

Until now, people who churn out of Medicaid because of an income bump often wound up uninsured because they can鈥檛 afford private insurance. Starting this month under the Affordable Care Act, many will become eligible for insurance and subsidies through the exchanges.

Millions Of Lower-Income People Expected To Shift Between Exchanges And Medicaid

But experts warn that churning will continue to be a problem, as patients bounce between Medicaid and the exchanges. Patients in an exchange plan may end up in a Medicaid managed care plan run by another company, with different doctors 鈥 or vice versa.

鈥淭his is a critical issue for the states and the providers. They are worried about patients experiencing gaps in coverage,鈥 said Jenna Stento, a senior manager who tracks the federal health law at Avalere Health, a consulting firm. 鈥淚t could be a very significant population that is moving back and forth.鈥

Matthew Buettgens, a senior research analyst at the Urban Institute who studies churning, estimates nine million people will shift between Medicaid and the exchanges over the course of a year.

Nearly 30 million Americans on Medicaid ,聽which are designed to help reduce costs by providing administrative control over health-care services and are becoming the coverage of choice for state Medicaid operations.聽 Millions more will become eligible for Medicaid this year under the federal health law. Many will be put in managed care. States pay managed care plans a fixed amount per member each month to set up networks of doctors and hospitals to provide services.

Buettgens said most states are only now beginning to think about ways to deal with the upcoming dilemma.

鈥淚t took a backseat to Medicaid expansion decisions and launching the marketplaces. Now it鈥檚 starting to get more practical attention,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he churning issue is going to become much more visible this year.鈥

Jeff Myers, president of Medicaid Health Plans of America, a trade group representing about 120 members, called the problem 鈥渟erious鈥 both for patients鈥 continuity of care and for the plans鈥 stability. Companies not only face administrative cost burdens, but they won鈥檛 be able to predict what their financial risk will be, he said.

鈥淭he challenge is how the states want to address the churning issue,鈥 Myers added. 鈥淎s far as we know, we haven鈥檛 gotten any guidance about how they intend to do that yet. They haven鈥檛 really given us any guidelines. We are on the front line.鈥

Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, said states are anxious to seek solutions.

鈥淵ou want people to have consistent insurance coverage, whether you鈥檙e dealing with someone who鈥檚 got mental health and substance abuse issues or a variety of undertreated chronic conditions,鈥 Salo said. 鈥淚f you get them into Medicaid at one point and get them stable and on a plan of care, you don鈥檛 want a transition into a different plan to set them back, and then have those people rebound back into Medicaid.鈥

Some states have tried to tackle the problem.

Nevada will require Medicaid managed care companies to offer a comparable plan on the exchanges starting this year.

Washington has created a program to help health care companies in the exchange also become Medicaid plans if they provide an identical network for patients.

In Delaware, companies in the exchange must continue to cover approved medical treatment and medications for new members coming from Medicaid during a transition period.

In Congress, a bill sponsored by Democratic Rep. Gene Green and Republican Rep. Joe Barton, both of Texas, to people on Medicaid, to help reduce churning. About two dozen states already require that for children on Medicaid and in the Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Program.聽

While the bill is enthusiastically supported by groups including the Children鈥檚 Hospital Association, many states are skeptical because they believe it will be costly.

All sides agree, however, that churning affects quality and interrupts care for Medicaid patients.

An April 2013 study by George Washington University researchers noted that interruptions in Medicaid coverage or pay for prescription drugs. They wind up delaying or avoiding treatment, such as vaccinations and blood pressure screenings.

While churning isn鈥檛 unique to Medicaid, in workplace insurance, health benefits generally remain unchanged over the course of a year. Employees stay enrolled until the next open enrollment or they change jobs.

With Medicaid, people generally must reapply for or renew coverage every six or 12 months, depending on the state. They also must report changes in income or family composition, such as a marriage or divorce, which could affect eligibility. They could be dumped from the rolls any given month.

Some experts suggest that the best strategy to avoid churning between Medicaid and the exchanges will be for health plans to sign up for both markets.

But that鈥檚 easier said than done.

Margaret Murray, CEO of the Association for Community Affiliated Plans, a trade group of nonprofit Medicaid health plans, said that 16 of its 60 members have joined the exchanges. The process isn鈥檛 easy, she noted, because of the differences between Medicaid contract requirements and state insurance department rules for commercial health plans.

鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a challenge for our members,鈥 Murray said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 collect premiums, they don鈥檛 market, they don鈥檛 set rates.鈥 Commercial plans do all three.

A recent analysis by Murray鈥檚 group found that while 41 percent of health-care plans that have signed up for the exchanges also operate Medicaid plans, the rest don鈥檛.聽

Even if a health-care company runs both a Medicaid plan and an exchange plan in a state, that doesn鈥檛 mean that patients will be able to stay in the same network.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no guarantee that your plan in one market is also participating in another market,鈥 said Sara Rosenbaum, a health policy professor at George Washington University. 鈥淭he potential is great that you not only will have to switch plans, but you鈥檒l have to switch providers if they don鈥檛 share networks.鈥

Experts say that whatever changes states make, they won鈥檛 be able to eliminate churning. But they can create programs that make the changeover smooth and reach out through consumer assistance and education.

In Oregon, where an advisory committee is spending six months reviewing options and data from other states before coming up with a plan, health officials are optimistic.

鈥淭he bottom line is we want to make sure people and their families are getting the care they need and that it鈥檚 a smooth transition,鈥 said Jeanene Smith, chief medical officer for the Oregon Health Authority.

Related Topics

InsuranceMedicaidAffordable Care ActCost and QualityUninsured

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