Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. to allow states’ strings for Medicaid

Intent is work requiremen­t for some receiving benefits

- DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s administra­tion said Thursday that it would allow states to impose work requiremen­ts on some Medicaid recipients, a policy shift in the health program for low-income people.

Federal officials said they would support state efforts to require able-bodied adults to engage in work or “community engagement activities” as a condition of their eligibilit­y for Medicaid.

“Our fundamenta­l goal is to make a positive and lasting difference in the health and wellness of our beneficiar­ies, and today’s announceme­nt is a step in that direction,” said Seema Verma, the administra­tor of the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Medicaid beneficiar­ies range from pregnant women and newborns to elderly nursing-home residents. Medicaid was expanded under former President Barack Obama, with an option allowing states to cover millions more low-income adults. Many of them have jobs that don’t provide health insurance.

People on Medicaid are not legally required to hold

jobs, but states traditiona­lly can seek federal waivers to test new ideas for the program.

Verma said the Trump administra­tion was responding to requests from Medicaid officials in 10 states that wanted to test requiring recipients to work or participat­e in training, education, job search, volunteer activities and caregiving. One of those states was Arkansas.

With Thursday’s announceme­nt, Trump administra­tion officials are moving to fulfill a conservati­ve vision for one of the nation’s largest social insurance programs: adding work requiremen­ts to receive Medicaid that are similar to those imposed in other programs such as food stamps and the welfare program known as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.

Trump’s new direction can be reversed by a future administra­tion.

In a speech to state Medicaid officials in November, Verma indicated that the Trump administra­tion would be receptive to adding work requiremen­ts and considerin­g other conservati­ve policy ideas to reshape Medicaid. She criticized the Obama administra­tion, saying it had focused on increasing Medicaid enrollment rather than helping people move out of poverty and into jobs.

“Believing that community engagement requiremen­ts do not support or promote the objectives of Medicaid is a tragic example of the soft bigotry of low expectatio­ns consistent­ly espoused by the prior administra­tion,” Verma said. “Those days are over.”

ARKANSAS’ WAIVER

Proposals to add a work requiremen­t in Medicaid came from Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Utah and Wisconsin. Several other states are considerin­g such work requiremen­ts.

In Arkansas, state Department of Human Services spokesman Amy Webb said the government’s guidance “seems to be in line with how we want to move in Arkansas.”

“We’re really optimistic that we’ll get official waiver approval very soon,” she said.

The state’s previously submitted proposal would require enrollees in Arkansas Works — the state’s expanded Medicaid program — to spend at least 80 hours a month on work or approved activities, such as taking classes, looking for jobs or volunteeri­ng.

The requiremen­t, modeled after the work requiremen­t for the state’s food stamps program, would initially apply to enrollees ages 30-49 and would then be extended to those ages 19-29.

Enrollees 50 and older would be exempt, as would those who are pregnant, living with dependent children, receiving welfare benefits, caring for an “incapacita­ted person,” or participat­ing in a drug or alcohol treatment program.

More than half of Arkansas Works enrollees would likely qualify for an exemption, Human Services Department officials have said.

The state also has proposed moving about 60,000 people off Arkansas Works by limiting eligibilit­y to people with incomes of up to the poverty level, instead of 138 percent of the poverty level.

More than 285,000 Arkansans were enrolled in the Medicaid program as of Jan. 1.

Across the country, advocates for Medicaid beneficiar­ies said the new policy was likely to be challenged in court if people were denied coverage for failure to meet a state’s work requiremen­t.

Federal law gives the secretary of Health and Human Services broad authority to grant waivers for state demonstrat­ion projects that “promote the objectives” of the Medicaid program. In the past, federal officials said work was not among those objectives.

But Trump administra­tion officials said Thursday that work requiremen­ts are consistent with the goals of Medicaid because work and work-related activities could improve the health of Medicaid beneficiar­ies.

“Productive work and community engagement may improve health outcomes,” Brian Neale, the director of the federal Medicaid office, said Thursday in a letter to state Medicaid directors. “For example, higher earnings are positively correlated with longer life span.”

In addition, Neale said, researcher­s have found “strong evidence that unemployme­nt is generally harmful to health,” while employment tends to improve “general mental health.”

Federal and state officials and health policy experts said Medicaid beneficiar­ies could work at a variety of jobs — as cashiers, telemarket­ers, housekeepe­rs, nursing and home health aides, child care providers, cooks and dishwasher­s, waiters and waitresses, retail sales clerks, landscaper­s, security guards and constructi­on laborers, for example. They could also work as volunteers at food pantries and other charitable organizati­ons.

The Trump administra­tion said states imposing work requiremen­ts must have plans to help people meet those requiremen­ts and should help arrange job training, child care and transporta­tion as needed. But, it said, states cannot use federal Medicaid funds to pay for such “supportive services.”

ADDICTION ISSUE

Medicaid has played a big role in combating the opioid epidemic, paying for a wide range of treatments and medication­s. But people addicted to opioids are often unable to work or to find jobs, and some employers are reluctant to hire people who fail drug tests.

Verma said the Trump administra­tion would require states to make “reasonable modificati­ons” of their work requiremen­ts for people who are addicted to opioids or have other substance use disorders.

For example, she said, time spent in medical treatment for opioid addiction might be counted toward compliance with a state’s work requiremen­t. Alternativ­ely, she said, states could exempt people from the work requiremen­t if they were participat­ing in “intensive medical treatment” for addiction.

The Trump administra­tion said state Medicaid officials could not impose work requiremen­ts on pregnant women, elderly beneficiar­ies, children or people who are unable to work because of disabiliti­es. States must also create exemptions for people who are “medically frail.”

Despite such exemptions, Democrats called the new policy inhumane and mean-spirited, echoing criticism of work requiremen­ts in a welfare law adopted in 1996.

Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said “the Trump administra­tion’s action today is cruel and a clear violation of both the Medicaid statute and long-standing congressio­nal intent” for waivers, which he said were meant to “allow states to expand access to Medicaid, not restrict it.”

But the new policy is exactly what some Republican governors were seeking.

In his State of the State address Tuesday, Gov. Phil Bryant of Mississipp­i, a Republican, said he supported a “workforce requiremen­t” for able-bodied adults on Medicaid.

“This is not, as some would have you believe, a punitive action aimed at recipients,” Bryant said. “It will actually help this population reap the rewards of a good job, and one day receive health care coverage from their employer, not the state or federal government.”

The National Associatio­n of Medicaid Directors, a nonpartisa­n group representi­ng state officials, said in a statement that there’s no consensus on whether work requiremen­ts are the right approach.

“This is a very complex issue that will require thoughtful and nuanced approaches,” said the group.

In Arkansas, state Department of Human Services spokesman Amy Webb said the government’s guidance “seems to be in line with how we want to move in Arkansas.”

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