The Indianapolis Star

Children getting wrongly dropped from Medicaid

- David A. Lieb Daniel Tsai

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Children in many states are being wrongly cut off from Medicaid because of a “glitch” in the automated systems being used in a massive eligibilit­y review for the government-run health care program, a top Medicaid official said Wednesday.

The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is asking all states to review their computer-automated processes to make sure that children are evaluated separately from their parents – and aren’t losing coverage merely because of their parents’ ineligibil­ity or inaction.

Though federal officials remained vague about the scope of the problem, it likely involves at least half the states and potentiall­y affects millions of children, said Joan Alker, executive director of Georgetown University Center for Children and Families.

“I think it’s a very significan­t problem,” said Alker, whose center is tracking the Medicaid renewal process in each state.

In most states, children can qualify for Medicaid at household incomes that are several times higher than allowed for adults.

Yet in many states, “eligible kids are not being successful­ly renewed, and that is a violation of federal requiremen­ts,” said Daniel Tsai, director of the CMS Center for Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program Services.

All states are in the midst of an enormous eligibilit­y review for Medicaid. A pandemic-era prohibitio­n on removing people from Medicaid ended in the spring, triggering the resumption of annual eligibilit­y determinat­ions. While the freeze was in effect, Medicaid enrollment swelled by nearly one-third, from 71 million people in February 2020 to 94 million in April 2023.

About 5 million people already have lost coverage as part of the eligibilit­y reviews, according to an Associated Press tally from state reports.

States are encouraged to automatica­lly renew people for Medicaid by using computer programs to review income and household informatio­n submitted for other social services, such as food aid or unemployme­nt benefits. When that doesn’t work, states are to send notices to homes asking people to verify their eligibilit­y informatio­n. When people fail to respond, they are dropped from Medicaid – a move described as a “procedural terminatio­n” by Medicaid officials.

Tsai said a “systems glitch” in some states is flagging entire households for further informatio­n – and dropping all family members when there’s no response – instead of reviewing each individual separately and automatica­lly renewing children who remain eligible.

A top Medicaid official in Maryland confirmed it’s one of the states with

In many states, “eligible kids are not being successful­ly renewed, and that is a violation of federal requiremen­ts.”

Director of the CMS Center for Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program Services

that problem.

Ryan Moran, the state’s Medicaid director and deputy secretary of health care financing, said Maryland is pausing all procedural terminatio­ns in August, retroactiv­ely reinstatin­g coverage for children who weren’t renewed in the automated process and working to fix its system as quickly as possible.

Moran said the state has identified 3,153 children who were potentiall­y affected – a little less than 5% of the state’s total procedural terminatio­ns to date. Some of those children could later be determined to be ineligible.

CMS sent letters Wednesday to states giving them until Sept. 13 to report whether their automated renewal systems have similar problems.

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