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Medicaid deal for states proposed

More control for states in exchange for funding limits

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

More control over spending on some low-income residents if they agree to limit how much feds kick in.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Thursday offered states more control over Medicaid spending for some of their poorest residents, but first governors must accept a limit on how much the feds kick in.

That’s a potentiall­y tricky deal for states facing rising costs in the federalsta­te health program for low-income people. Although Oklahoma’s Republican governor quickly embraced the concept, it’s unclear how many others will follow.

With President Donald Trump already getting poor marks from the public for his handling of health care, the Medicaid plan is likely to provide more electionye­ar talking points for Democrats. It dovetails with Trump administra­tion efforts to restrain spending on other programs that help the poor, including food stamps and housing assistance.

Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicaid and Medicaid Services, said the idea behind the administra­tion’s “Healthy Adult Opportunit­y” is to improve the quality of care for the poor while controllin­g costs.

But the American Medical Associatio­n and a profession­al society representi­ng cancer doctors warned against limits on Medicaid financing, and advocates for low-income people said the administra­tion wants to weaken the social safety net.

Prominent Democratic lawmakers suggested Trump doesn’t have the legal authority to make states such an offer, and a public advocacy law firm said it’s weighing a lawsuit.

As unveiled by Verma, the complex block grant proposal would be a first step to changing a longstandi­ng financial arrangemen­t between Washington and the states.

The federal share of Medicaid is now openended, meaning that a state is at least partly protected from unpleasant surprises like a new, $300,000 prescripti­on drug or an economic downturn that swells enrollment.

Outlined in a letter from Verma to state Medicaid directors, the deal is optional for states. To get it, they’d have to apply for a federal waiver.

Its scope would be restricted to coverage for “able-bodied” adults under 65. A state could not put nursing home residents, disabled people or very low-income pregnant women and children into the new plan. The federal government would not limit its Medicaid contributi­on for these groups, considered the most sensitive.

“Our focus is to change the whole paradigm and to reset the framework of how we’re working with states,” said Verma. “We are providing them this upfront flexibilit­y, and the federal government is in the role of monitoring the program.”

In exchange for operating under a fixed federal allocation, states, among other things, would be able to:

Limit what prescripti­on drugs and benefits will be covered, within certain guidelines.

Waive a current Medicaid benefit that allows a low-income person to get retroactiv­e coverage for medical care going back three months.

Use copays to steer Medicaid recipients to services that are deemed to have the highest value.

Share in savings with the federal government, under certain conditions.

Require Medicaid recipients to work, get schooling and training, or volunteer in their communitie­s.

One potential twist is whether GOP-led states that have refused the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion would be more receptive under the terms proposed by the administra­tion. For example, Oklahoma voters will get to decide on a Medicaid expansion ballot initiative this year, and Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt has expressed interest in a block grant as part of an alternativ­e approach.

Stitt spoke at the formal presentati­on of the Trump plan, calling it a “gamechange­r” and saying his administra­tion will get to work immediatel­y on its proposal.

Verma said the plan could raise the bar on medical care for the poor. States would have to agree to report a series of health indicators as a condition of participat­ing.

“If a state set up something that was onerous, that would be an impetus for the federal government to take action,” she said.

Medicaid is a $600 billion federal-state program that covers about 70 million low-income people, from elderly nursing home residents to many newborns.

President Barack Obama’s health care law gave states the option of expanding it. Most states have done so, covering millions more able-bodied adults. Polls show the program has widespread public support.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that after failing to repeal the Obama law, the administra­tion is now trying to “cap and cut” Medicaid.

 ?? T.J. KIRKPATRIC­K/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, who unveiled the new program Thursday, speaks at the White House as the president looks on in November.
T.J. KIRKPATRIC­K/THE NEW YORK TIMES Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, who unveiled the new program Thursday, speaks at the White House as the president looks on in November.

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