Modern Healthcare

CMS vows to curb costs of state Medicaid demonstrat­ions

- By Susannah Luthi

THE CMS IS TIGHTENING its financial oversight of state Medicaid waiver demonstrat­ions.

Federal law requires Medicaid demonstrat­ions to be budget-neutral, and the CMS can’t disburse additional funds for the proposals. The agency last week issued a guidance noting that it will run tighter analysis on demonstrat­ion costs to make sure states are meeting budget-neutrality.

The agency will not approve waivers that predict the federal government will incur additional costs. In a statement, CMS Administra­tor Seema Verma reit- erated that federal Medicaid spending jumped by $100 billion from 2013 to 2016. That span includes the first years of Medicaid expansion, and the CMS mainly shoulders those costs.

“Today’s guidance is a comprehens­ive explanatio­n of how CMS and our state partners can ensure that new demonstrat­ion projects can simultaneo­usly promote Medicaid’s objectives and keep federal spending under control,” Verma said.

Along with the guidance, the CMS unveiled a new monitoring tool it will require states to use for all demonstrat­ions. States will need to upload all the financial data of a given Medicaid demonstrat­ion into the tool, which will consolidat­e the numbers in one report to the agency.

Verma and U.S. Comptrolle­r General Gene Dodaro last week also voiced concerns to a Senate panel that states sometimes use demonstrat­ions to draw down additional funds. Dodaro said states fall short when it comes to evaluating the demonstrat­ions that are supposed to serve as test runs to inform new policy.

Dodaro told senators that a 2016 CMS policy that curbed states’ ability to keep left-over funds from their demonstrat­ion or carry them forward to new demonstrat­ions had saved the federal government nearly $63 billion in two years. But the policy did not affect all the “questionab­le methods” the Government Accountabi­lity Office had identified in how the CMS determines demonstrat­ion spending limits, he said.●

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States