Tag: medicaid
Is There Really A Question? Intervenor States Have Clear Interest in Defending the Affordable Care Act
Proposed Rule on Basic Health Program Impedes States’ Progress
Recently, CMS issued a proposed rule modifying the federal funding methodology for the Basic Health Program (BHP) for 2019 and 2020. Under the proposal, technical changes could cause participating states to lose $300 million in federal funding. While funding for the programs is being debated, we checked in on how Minnesota and New York’s BHPs are faring amidst federal uncertainty.
Virginia’s Enrollment Season Perfect Storm
Across the country, states are yet again dealing with policy changes just before the fall open enrollment season. Virginia, however, is a special case. The state is dealing with simultaneous implementation of Medicaid expansion, expanded short-term limited duration insurance and association health plans, and changes to the definition of sole proprietors for small employers, all with less funding for the navigator program. CHIR’s Olivia Hoppe breaks down how each change affects Virginians.
New Report Shows Role of Medicaid Expansion in Rural Area, Small Town Health Coverage
Under the Affordable Care Act, 33 states and the District of Columbia expanded Medicaid, greatly increasing coverage under the public program. In a new report, our sister center,
the Center for Children and Families, examines the impact of Medicaid expansion on health coverage in rural areas and small towns, communities that for many years have faced high premiums and limited choices on the private insurance market.
House Committee to Consider Expanding Health Savings Account Tax Breaks for High Income
On July 11, the full House Ways and Means Committee approved multiple health-related tax bills, many of which would expand tax breaks for Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). As Georgetown Center for Children and Families’ Edwin Park explains, these HSA bills would primarily benefit those with high incomes, rather than make health coverage more affordable for low- and moderate-income children and families.
The Urban Institute’s New Proposal to Get Us Closer to Universal Coverage
In preparation for the day when a progressive vision for health reform may have more supporters in the White House and Congress, a number of leading members of Congress have developed new and innovative proposals. Everyone is trying to answer the same question: How do we get the most people covered in the most affordable way? The Urban Institute might have a good answer. CHIR’s Olivia Hoppe explains.
February 2018 Research Round Up: What We’re Reading
In CHIRblog’s February installment of What We’re Reading, CHIR’s Olivia Hoppe digs into new research that highlights the consequences of the recent short-term limited-duration health plan rule, the effects of expanded private insurance on access to primary and specialty care, the impact of the ACA’s dependent coverage provision on birth and prenatal outcomes, and an assessment of state-level efforts to expand access, affordability, and quality of coverage.
IRS Issues Guidance on Overlapping Medicaid and Marketplace Coverage
It’s enough to make you loopy: inside the Kafka-esque world of Medicaid “loopers”
Remember the Medicaid loopers? These are people who applied for coverage through the health insurance Marketplace, to be told they were initially assessed as Medicaid eligible, and to apply for coverage with their state’s Medicaid agency. If the Medicaid agency rejected their application, they were then bounced back to the Marketplace. In this blog post, Sabrina Corlette takes a look at one family’s efforts to get through a maze of bureaucracy to obtain coverage for their children.