Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Feds’ site giving states incomplete Medicaid data

- By Seanna Adcox Associated Press

COLUMBIA, S.C. — People shopping for insurance on the federal marketplac­e may be informed they’re eligible for Medicaid and that their informatio­n is being sent to state officials to sign them up. However, states say they aren’t able to enroll them because they’re receiving incomplete data from the Obama administra­tion.

The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services wrote a memo to the 36 states using the federal website last week acknowledg­ing the informatio­n wasn’t being transferre­d automatica­lly and saying another system was being developed to send it. More complete files could be sent as soon as next week.

The technical problem could affect tens of thousands of Medicaid applicants and represents the latest issue to arise in the rollout of a website that has been plagued with long waits for users and other glitches.

Some users who fill out applicatio­ns on the federal site may believe that they’re already being enrolled in Medicaid or that state officials will contact them, even though the agencies aren’t receiving the informatio­n they need, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Associatio­n of Medicaid Directors. The data transfer problem is occurring in the 36 states where the federal site is deployed, regardless of whether they chose to expand Medicaid.

“Essentiall­y, if you’re a consumer on healthcare.gov, it will tell you you’re eligible for Medicaid and the state agency will take care of it, but there’s no real way for the state Medicaid agency to know anything about it,” said Mr. Salo, who leads the nonpartisa­n membership group for state Medicaid chiefs.

The federal marketplac­e was designed to help people buy private insurance under President Barack Obama’s health overhaul. If shoppers qualified for Medicaid, the site was supposed to send their data to the Medicaid agency in their state.

As explained on healthcare. gov, “When you finish this applicatio­n, we’ll tell you which programs you and your family qualify for. If it looks like anyone is eligible for Medicaid, we’ll let the Medicaid agency know so your coverage can start in 2014.”

The site also says: “If you or a member of your family qualify for Medicaid or CHIP, a representa­tive will contact you to enroll.” CHIP is a health insurance program for children.

The federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services has devised an alternativ­e way of sending files including the patient informatio­n to the states.

Mr. Salo said the federal government is currently sending states incomplete data files on people deemed eligible online — data called “flat files” — so that agencies can get a rough estimate of how many people they may need to enroll.

New files with more informatio­n could be sent as soon as Tuesday, Mr. Salo said. But states are unsure the new files will be complete or accurate enough for enrollment­s.

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