Transcript
Page 1: Medicaid and poor adults:  Who’s left out?  How can federal policy help?

THE URBAN INSTITUTE 1

Medicaid and poor adults: Who’s left out? How can federal policy help?

Stan Dorn The Urban [email protected]://www.urban.org/health_policy/ http://www.urban.org

September 15, 2008

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THE URBAN INSTITUTE 2

“Medicaid covers the poor … while Medicare is primarily designed for the elderly…”

H. Sheppard, “States Get A Handle On Medicaid: Better Economy, Federal-law Changes Help,” Los Angeles Daily News, 11/28/06

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THE URBAN INSTITUTE 3

Medicaid covers the poor only if they are - •Children•Currently caring for

dependent children•Pregnant

•Elderly •People with severe and

permanent disabilities

“Parents and children” side of the program

“Elderly and disabled” side of the program

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Who’s left out?

•Adults without children•Empty nesters

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Topics to cover

1. The federal exclusion of non-categorical adults2. Facts about uninsured, non-categorical adults3. Federal policy options

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THE URBAN INSTITUTE

Part I

The federal exclusion

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What is the federal exclusion of non-categorical adults?

•Federal matching funds are limited to the categorically eligible•States can obtain 1115 waivers, but

Federal budget neutrality rules = no new money (at least in theory)

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How many states cover non-categorical adults?

1115 waivers State-only funds

Comprehensive 9 states: AZ, DE, HA, ME, MA, NM, NY, OR, VT

3 states: DC, MN, WA

Less than comprehensive

12 states: AR, DC, IA, ID, IN, MD, MI, MO, MT, OK, TN, UT

1 state: PA

Sources: Klein and Schwartz, 2008; Dorn, et al., 2005. Note: comprehensive programs provide (a) benefitsat least as generous as typical ESI to (b) at least all adults up to 100% FPL.

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The history of this exclusion

•Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601

•Social Security Act of 1935

•Medicaid’s creation in 1965

•Medicaid’s subsequent evolution

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In short:•It is not clear how much thought federal

policymakers gave to this Medicaid exclusion.•Basic judgment underlying the exclusion:

Able-bodied adults should be able to support themselves and so do not need federally-funded cash assistance.

Judgment renderedIn 1935About cash assistance

Can poor, able-bodied adults provide themselves with health coverage in 2008?

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THE URBAN INSTITUTE

Part II

Facts about uninsured, non-categorical adults

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Low-income, non-categorical adults outnumber all uninsured children and all uninsured parents

Uninsured, by income and relationship to children: 2006 (millions)

3.9 3.88.92.6 4.1

6.9

1.41.9

4.3

1.51.8

5.3

Children Parents ofdependent children

Other adults

300+% FPL

200-299% FPL

100-199% FPL

Under 100% FPL

Source: KCMU/UI, October 2007.

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More than half of all poor uninsured are non-categorical adults

Uninsured with incomes below FPL, by relationship to children: 2006

Children, 20%

Parents of Dependent

Children, 25%

Other Adults, 55%

Source: KCMU/UI, October 2007.

Total number: 16.6 million

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Uninsured non-categorical adults, by age, income, and eligibility for Medicaid/SCHIP: 2004 (millions)

1.1 0.2 0.3 0.3

7.9

3.2 2.9 3.6

1.5

1.1 1.31.9

19 to 29 30 to 39 40 to 49 50 to 64Age

Eligible Ineligible, income below 300% FPL Ineligible, income at 300%+ FPL

Source: Holahan, et al., February 2007.

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Uninsured, non-categorical adults broadly resemble other uninsured

Uninsured, non-categorical adults, by employment:

2006

Working 79%

Not Working

21%

Total number: 25.5 million

Uninsured, non-categorical adults, by citizenship: 2006

U.S. citizens

81%

Non-citizens

19%

Total number: 25.5 million

Source: KCMU/UI, October 2007.

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Uninsured, non-categorical adults broadly resemble other uninsured (continued)

Uninsured, non-categorical adults, by race and

ethnicity: 2006

Black, 16%

Asian & other,

7%

Latino, 26%

White, 51%

Total number: 25.5 million

Uninsured, non-categorical adults, by income 2006

101-200%

FPL, 25%

201-300%

FPL, 17%

301+% FPL, 29%

0-100% FPL, 29%

Total number: 25.5 million

Source: KCMU/UI, October 2007.

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Percentage of adults ages 19–29 reporting going without various services because of cost, by health insurance status: 2005

38% 37% 35%

45%

57%

17%12% 11%

18%

31%

Fill prescriptions Necessaryspecialist visits

Medical test,treatment, or

follow-up

Doctor visit formedical problem

Any of theseservices

Uninsured Insured

Source: Collins, et al., 2007.

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Impact of health insurance coverage on health status for adults ages 55–64, controlling for multiple factors: 1992–2000

6.7%

4.0%

13.3%

3.9%2.7%

16.6%

Death rate Poor health Excellent health

Actual Insurance Coverage Simulated Full Insurance Coverage

Source: Hadley and Waidmann, 2006.

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Effect of uninsurance on adults ages 55-64, controlling for multiple factors•Uninsurance increases risk of death:

From 7.5 percent to 10.5 percent among all adults age 55-64

From 9.4 percent to 14.1 percent in the lowest income quartile of such adults

•The lack of insurance among these adults Causes more than 13,000 deaths a yearIs the third-leading cause of death, after cancer

and heart diseaseSource: McWilliams et al., 2004

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THE URBAN INSTITUTE

Part III

Federal policy options

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Assumption: for the poorest, uninsured, non-categorical adults, Medicaid is the policy vehicle •100% FPL = $851/month for an individual in ‘07•Median cost-sharing, non-group plans, ’06-07

Average PPO deductible - $1,747Average co-pay - $28/$35, primary/specialty

•Effect of cost-sharing on indigent patientsMN study - $1/$3 drug copays caused 52% of affected Medicaid beneficiaries to go without necessary medicine; among this group, 34% used the ER or were admitted to the hospital.RAND study – among low-income adults with hypertension, cost-sharing increased blood pressure, raising risk of death by 14%Quebec study – maximum $12/month copays for welfare recipients increased ER use by 78%, hospitalization/institutionalization/death by 88%California study – $1/visit copays in the 1970s increased inpatient utilization by 17%

Sources: AHIP, 2006-2007 Individual Market Survey; M. Mendiola, et al., “Consequences of Tiered Medicaid Prescription Drug Copayments Among Patients in Hennepin County, Minnesota,” presented at Society of General Internal Medicine National Conference, May 2005; J. Gruber, The Role of Consumer Copayments for Health Care: Lessons from the RAND Health Insurance Experiment and Beyond, KFF, October 2006; Robyn Tamblyn, et al., “Adverse Events Associated with Prescription Drug Cost-Sharing among Poor and Elderly Persons,” JAMA 285(4): 421-429, January 2001; J. Helms, et al., “Copayments and the Demand for Medical Care: The California Medicaid Experience,” Bell Journal of Economics, 9:192-209, 1978.

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For non-categorical adults at higher income levels, reasonable to consider other policy remedies•Refundable, advanceable

federal income tax credits •Medicare buy-in for the

near-elderly

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Medicaid approach #1 – change budget neutrality requirements for waivers•Policy variants

Take Medicare savings into accountEliminate budget neutrality requirement for waiver

coverage of poor adults

•ImpactWaivers more useful than today - butWaivers are inherently limited

•Broader budget implications

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Medicaid approach #2 – change Medicaid from categorical to purely income-based eligibility•Advantages

Administrative efficiencyEquity

•Disadvantage – potentially eliminates current-law coverageExamples – nursing home coverage, families moving from

welfare to employment, working disabled, near-poor kids, pregnant women, etc.

In 2006, Medicaid coverage >150% FPL included4.4 million non-elderly adults6.4 million children

•Variation – Medicaid coverage up to threshold, state options to structure coverage above threshold (NASHP)Potential cost increase above income threshold

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Medicaid approach #3 – add coverage of poor adults

•Idea All adults with incomes below a certain threshold

receive Medicaid, regardless of categoryOther eligibility categories continue

•Disadvantages, compared to pure income-based eligibilityLess efficiency savings Fewer equity gains

•Advantage - above income threshold, retains existing coverage without increasing costs

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Medicaid policy questions, regardless of approach•Optional or mandatory eligibility?•Federal funding – standard or enhanced?

If standard, limited state implementation or unfunded mandate

If enhanced, many ways to deliver funds:Enhanced match for this category;Program-wide increase in federal funding;Higher federal match for dual eligibles;Uncapped FMAP or SCHIP-style state allotments; Etc.

•Financial eligibilityIncomeAssets

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Conclusion•Low-income, non-categorical adults comprise

the largest group of uninsured•They suffer serious harm, particularly among

older adults•Serious policy design questions need to be

answered in deciding how best to provide coverage


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