State Medicaid programs can only waive copayments for
coronavirus testing and treatment if they also suspend copayments for
all services, unless they seek a time-consuming Section 1115 waiver, the
CMS said Thursday in a new Medicaid guidance to the states on COVID-19.
State Medicaid programs do not need federal approval to
cover telehealth services in the same manner and at the same rate they
pay for face-to-face services, the CMS said. In case of workforce
shortages, states can expand the types of providers authorized to
deliver services by filing a state plan amendment.
“The Trump administration is actively working with governors
to provide flexibility in Medicaid and CHIP programs, so states can
respond effectively to this virus,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma
in a news release.
The agency said senior CMS leaders held a call last week
with all state Medicaid agencies. On Wednesday, CMS officials met with
leaders of Medicaid Health Plans of America, who asked the agency to establish consistency in how states and plans address the coronavirus outbreak.
But observers felt the administration was slower in
addressing Medicaid’s response to the pandemic than in dealing with
Medicare and commercial insurance issues. The administration has
consistently sought to cut back Medicaid enrollment and spending.
“What I’m hearing from my clients is there is a lot of
policy coming out of the CMS related to Medicare and not enough on
Medicaid,” said Kinda Serafi, a partner at Manatt Health who consults
with state Medicaid agencies. “The states are very eager for
clarification on all these issues.”
The Trump administration has pushed commercial insurers and Medicare Advantage plans
to quickly waive cost-sharing for COVID-19 testing, to encourage
Americans who think they have been exposed or infected to get tested and
thus slow the spread of the disease.
But the CMS said state Medicaid programs would have to
eliminate copays for all services if they want to reduce financial
barriers to COVID-19 testing through a state plan amendment, which can
be done quickly. If they aren’t willing to erase all copays, they’d have
to apply for a Section 1115 waiver, which can take months to get
approved.
“Having to eliminate co-payments for an entire program in
order to eliminate co-payments just for COVID-19 may give some states
pause,” Serafi said.
States that already have eliminated Medicaid copayments for
COVID-19 testing include New Jersey, New York, and Washington. While
copays in the Medicaid program are relatively small, ranging from $1 to
$5, experts say they could discourage low-income people from getting
tested for the coronavirus.
Medical care can’t be denied to Medicaid enrollees with
incomes below 100% of the federal poverty level based on nonpayment of
copays. But copays can be enforced against enrollees with incomes above
that threshold.
Some Medicaid health plans on their own are waiving copays
related to COVID-19 testing and treatment, said Craig Kennedy, CEO of
Medicaid Health Plans of America. “But this is an emergency,” he added.
“We would love it to be consistent for all 72 million Medicaid
beneficiaries.”
Medicaid plans, state officials, and policy experts also
sought CMS guidance on whether they could ease enrollment and
re-enrollment processes to get and keep people covered in order to
ensure they get testing and treatment as the pandemic advances. The CMS
has tightened eligibility redetermination to enhance program integrity,
reducing Medicaid enrollment by hundreds of thousands.
In the new FAQ, the agency said states that have chosen to
conduct eligibility redeterminations more frequently than once a year
may submit a state plan amendment to extend the renewal period to one
year.
Some experts also have urged the CMS to do what it has done in past emergencies and approve fast-tracked waivers
temporarily extending Medicaid coverage to people who are affected, as
happened following Hurricane Katrina and other catastrophes.
The new FAQ said states can choose to expand coverage by
raising income eligibility standards for some populations through a
state plan amendment, but that expansion could not be applied only to
people affected by COVID-19. That’s the process for permanently
expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.
Some observers predict that the coronavirus outbreak may
prompt states that have not expanded Medicaid to reconsider if
low-income people who lack health insurance start showing up in large
numbers at healthcare facilities with virus exposure or actual
infection.
“I could see the combined forces of an economic downturn and
the coronavirus causing states that haven’t expanded to do so,” said
Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser
Family Foundation.
But so far GOP opponents of expansion in North Carolina,
Georgia, Kansas, and other states haven’t budged. In North Carolina, GOP
legislative leaders have been locked for months in a budget impasse
with Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper over his push for expansion.
“I don’t believe there is any change in attitudes toward
expansion because of the current state of the potential pandemic,” said
Rep. Donny Lambeth, a North Carolina Republican who supports expansion
with a work requirement.
https://www.modernhealthcare.com/medicaid/waive-covid-19-copays-medicaid-must-waive-all-co-pays-cms
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