Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
CMS Plans To Remove Noncitizens From Medicaid And CHIP
The Trump administration announced a new initiative Tuesday aimed at getting noncitizens disenrolled from the Medicaid program and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). "CMS will begin providing states with monthly enrollment reports identifying individuals whose citizenship or immigration status could not be confirmed through federal databases," the agency said in a press release. "States are responsible for reviewing cases, verifying the citizenship or immigration status of identified individuals, requesting additional documentation if needed, and taking appropriate actions when necessary, including adjusting coverage or enforcing noncitizen eligibility rules." (Frieden, 8/19)
New federal rules that are to go into effect in 2027 will require some Americans enrolled in an expansion of the Medicaid program to prove they鈥檙e working at least 80 hours per month, however the law President Trump signed in July lets states implement the changes earlier. Governor Kim Reynolds said the change will take effect in Iowa on January 1, 2026. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have to align with what the federal government鈥檚 regulations are,鈥 Reynolds told Radio Iowa. (Henderson, 8/19)
As the county鈥檚 safety net hospital, AHS expects to be disproportionately impacted by Medicaid cuts as 70-80% of its funding comes from federal and state healthcare reimbursements. (Hunter, 8/19)
Advocates are warning the Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump鈥檚 tax and spending law will disproportionately harm Black women and children who depend on the program, worsening already disparate health outcomes among Black Americans. Although Black people represent about 14 percent of the U.S. population, they account for more than 20 percent of Medicaid enrollees, according to Pew Research Center 鈥 and almost 60 percent of all Black children are enrolled in Medicaid, according to a recent analysis from the NAACP and other advocacy organizations. (Daniels, 8/19)
North Carolina Medicaid providers will see at least a 3% cut in reimbursement rates beginning Oct. 1, with services like long-term behavioral healthcare, hospital care, nursing homes and physicians seeing 8% to 10% in cuts. The cuts come after state lawmakers passed a stopgap 鈥渕ini budget鈥 spending plan, which leaves Medicaid with a $319 million shortfall, despite allocating $600 million for Medicaid oversight fund and rebase. (Ashley, 8/19)
More than 1 in 10 psychiatric emergency department visits by young Medicaid patients lead to boarding, with rates of boarding varying widely from state to state, according to a recent analysis. Boarding, or a delay in the time until an ED patient is given an inpatient bed, has been cited as an increasing issue across the country鈥檚 EDs. The longer wait for appropriate care not only imposes a potential physical and emotional toll on patients but can increase the costs of care delivery while increasing stress and personal safety risks for staff. (Muoio, 8/19)
In related news about homeless veterans 鈥
In an executive order issued late last month, President Trump instructed government agencies to stop funding Housing First programs which, the order said, 鈥渄eprioritize accountability and fail to promote treatment, recovery and self-sufficiency.鈥 Though veterans are not mentioned in the executive order, they are at the heart of the nation鈥檚 homelessness crisis. Roughly one in every 11 homeless people is a veteran, according to the government鈥檚 annual census, and housing them is a major priority for Congress, which allotted $3.2 billion for that purpose this year. Many who work with homeless veterans said they were blindsided by the president鈥檚 new policy. (Barry, 8/19)
In Medicare updates 鈥
A federal judge in Texas struck down Elevance Health鈥檚 lawsuit that argued the government unfairly lowered its Medicare Advantage quality ratings 鈥 a decision that could cost Elevance $375 million in bonus revenue. (Herman, 8/19)
A federal judge vacated a regulation that would have limited how Medicare Advantage insurance companies can pay for marketing. Judge Reed O鈥機onnor, of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Fort Worth, ruled the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services exceeded its statutory authority and violated the Administrative Procedure Act by prohibiting insurance companies from offering marketers volume-based bonuses and other incentives to sell their policies and capping payments for administrative expenses at $100. (Tepper, 8/19)