Modern Healthcare

Medicaid enrollment boost wouldn’t offset lower utilizatio­n, payer mix changes

- By Michael Brady

SAFETY NET PROVIDERS could get some financial relief from an uptick in Medicaid enrollment early next year, but it probably won’t be enough to offset declines in healthcare utilizatio­n or changes to payer mix.

When the COVID-19 pandemic began, many experts predicted Medicaid enrollment would increase dramatical­ly in response to rapidly rising unemployme­nt. But enrollment growth has been driven by states pausing eligibilit­y redetermin­ation processes during the public health crisis. Insurers and state health department­s have not seen significan­t enrollment growth among people who have lost job-based health coverage.

“Medicaid is a counter-cyclical program, so anytime there’s an economic downturn, the Medicaid rolls expand,” Manatt Health partner Anne Karl said. “We haven’t seen that yet to the extent that we expected.”

Experts said that could change as the number of long-term unemployed people rises, and more people lose their employer-sponsored insurance. According to the Labor Department, 2.4 million people had been out of work for 27 weeks or more as of Oct. 2. Nearly 5 million more individual­s have been unemployed for 15 to 26 weeks— most of them will join the ranks of the long-term unemployed by year-end.

“This is the biggest downturn the economy’s had in the existence of the Medicaid program, so it would suggest there would be large numbers of people who’ve never been on Medicaid and are now eligible,” Karl said.

The Affordable Care Act sign-up period could jump-start Medicaid enrollment too, said Edwin

Park, a research professor at the Georgetown

University McCourt School of Public Policy. Even though people can apply for Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program anytime, the Medicaid rolls usually grow after the ACA’s open-enrollment period because people get screened for Medicaid eligibilit­y when they apply for exchange subsidies. Increased Medicaid enrollment could help safety-net providers whose small margins left them financiall­y vulnerable even before the “big surge in uncompensa­ted care costs,” Park said.

It could also make up for some of the disproport­ionate declines in healthcare utilizatio­n that some safety-net providers have experience­d—including behavioral health and substance abuse treatment providers—by expanding access to care, said Matt Salo, ex

“This is the biggest downturn the economy’s had in the existence of the Medicaid program, so it would suggest there would be large numbers of people who’ve never been on Medicaid and are now eligible.” Anne Karl, Manatt Health partner

ecutive director of the National Associatio­n of Medicaid Directors.

But as COVID-19 cases continue to rise, utilizatio­n could start to drop off again.

“In all likelihood, the worst is coming,” Salo said. Many people could say to themselves, “‘If I’m not bleeding to death right now, I’m not going to go to the hospital.’ ”

The financial difficulti­es could be worse for medical practices than for hospitals because, unlike hospitals, they’re earning little additional revenue from treating COVID-19 patients, said Anders Gilberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the Medical Group Management Associatio­n.

“What’s most concerning is because of the massive job losses as a result of the virus there’s going to be this payer-mix shift,” he said. “That will be a net negative.”

Providers are likely to pay the price as patients move from commercial plans with higher reimbursem­ents to Medicaid, which pays the least of any payer. According to the Urban Institute, Medicaid paid 72% of what Medicare reimbursed in 2016.

But increasing enrollment could lead to better access to care for Medicaid beneficiar­ies. According to the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, higher Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates did not always cause more providers to take part in the program. At the same time, Medicaid expansion led to an increase in the number of appointmen­ts available to Medicaid beneficiar­ies.

Still, experts said that what’s needed most is more fiscal relief from Congress for states and providers because state Medicaid programs have limited resources to cope with increasing enrollment and costs.

“It’s really an unsolvable problem. States can’t print money and have to

● balance their budgets,” Salo said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States