Modern Healthcare

CMS approves Nebraska’s Medicaid expansion waiver

- By Michael Brady

CMS will allow Nebraska to offer extra benefits to newly eligible Medicaid beneficiar­ies under the state’s program expansion if they agree to follow work and wellness requiremen­ts.

The “prime” tier will allow expansion enrollees to receive the same benefits as Nebraska’s traditiona­l Medicaid population if they fulfill community engagement, personal responsibi­lity and wellness activities. The “basic” package would cover basic health services and prescripti­on drugs but drop coverage for dental, vision and over-thecounter drugs. Medicaid expansion enrollees would receive basic benefits even if they don’t fulfill any of the activities required for prime benefits. In the state’s proposal, Nebraska officials said almost a third of new enrollees would likely qualify for basic benefits only.

“The Nebraska demonstrat­ion is a unique model designed to provide a voluntary pathway to added benefits for certain adult beneficiar­ies who participat­e in wellness activities, as well as work and take part in other community engagement activities, which can help lift them from poverty and put them on a road to improved health and independen­ce,” CMS Administra­tor Seema Verma said in a statement last week.

In its approval letter, CMS said Nebraska’s demonstrat­ion is likely to promote Medicaid’s objectives because it: allows the expansion population to access additional benefits; tests whether the ability to opt into additional services lowers program costs; and tests whether the incentive structure improves health outcomes. Nebraska will have to develop a plan to evaluate the demonstrat­ion and have CMS approve it before the wellness and personal responsibi­lity requiremen­ts take effect April 1. The work requiremen­ts go into effect in 2022.

Gov. Pete Ricketts and Republican state lawmakers repeatedly sought to block Medicaid expansion, but Nebraskans in 2018 approved a ballot initiative that extended Medicaid coverage to most nondisable­d adults ages 19 to 64 who earn up to 138% of the federal poverty level. The state’s Republican leadership opted to request a waiver from CMS in December that would allow it to create two tiers of benefits for the newly eligible population rather than pursue a convention­al Medicaid expansion.

Coverage for Nebraska’s expansion population started Oct. 1 after a nearly two-year delay that brought a wave of criticism and lawsuits from advocates who thought Nebraska’s leadership was dragging its feet because it didn’t want the expansion to go into effect

The waiver is “clearly … an attempt to undercut that expansion,” said Edwin Park, a research professor at the Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy.

The Trump administra­tion has pushed states to adopt a Medicaid work requiremen­t, claiming that such policies can improve people’s health outcomes by getting them to work more. Republican-led states were eager to pursue them, but the courts have ruled against work requiremen­ts so far, including Arkansas and Kentucky. Experts think Nebraska’s approach could overcome potential legal challenges because no one will lose coverage under the policy, unlike other work requiremen­ts approved by

● the Trump administra­tion.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States