Calhoun Times

Medicaid redetermin­ation process gets rolling in Ga.

- By Rebecca Grapevine

Capitol Beat News Service

The complex process of reassessin­g Georgians’ eligibilit­y for Medicaid has started.

Covid-era Medicaid regulation­s prevented anyone enrolled in Medicaid from being disenrolle­d during the public health emergency.

But those pandemic-era regulation­s ended at the start of this month, and Georgia will now have to determine which Medicaid members remain eligible for coverage.

In Georgia, children from low-income families as well as pregnant women are eligible for Medicaid. The state also provides Medicaid to new mothers for up to 12 months after delivery. Some very lowincome adults as well as aged, blind and certain disabled population­s are also eligible.

Prior to the pandemic, Georgians enrolled in Medicaid had their eligibilit­y checked yearly. But all of those eligibilit­y checks were put on pause for several years.

That meant that teenagers who typically would have aged out of the program or new mothers whose pregnancy-related Medicaid would have expired remained on the rolls.

The state estimates that about half a million Georgians were newly enrolled in Medicaid and PeachCare for Kids during the pandemic. The total number of Medicaid enrollees is now about 2.7 million, about one-fourth of the state’s population.

Each of those members will need to have their eligibilit­y redetermin­ed, a heavy lift for the state.

The Georgia Department of Community Health, which oversees the state Medicaid program, is partnering with the Department of Human Services to manage the process.

With the redetermin­ation process expected to take more than a year, the fiscal 2023 mid-year budget includes funding to hire 450 case managers to manage the process at DHS.

The agency has also installed self-service kiosks in more than 400 public library locations.

The state has developed a marketing campaign — represente­d by the “George A. Peach” mascot — to help Georgians learn more about the new process. Materials are currently available in Spanish, Burmese, Korean, Nepali, Portuguese, and Vietnamese as well as English.

“I have seen the state agencies, both DCH and DHS, come forward with really good faith efforts to plan as best they can,” said Laura Colbert, executive director of Georgians for a Healthy Future.

“The trickiest part of this seems to be maybe staffing for both DHS and DCH … hiring enough Medicaid eligibilit­y workers. Making sure they are trained properly and prepared to do that job over the next 12 to 14 months is going to be very difficult in this work and labor environmen­t.”

State budget hearings earlier this year highlighte­d the labor shortages and high turnover rates most state agencies face.

Many adults will lose coverage because Georgia is one of 10 states that have not fully expanded Medicaid, Colbert said.

Some children also may lose coverage because of the complexity of the bureaucrat­ic process, she added.

“Some folks are going to be ineligible for Medicaid and not eligible for anything else,” Colbert said. “We will see very large coverage losses.”

Other adults who lose coverage may be able to enroll in Affordable Care Act plans available on the Healthcare.gov marketplac­e. Those who lose coverage will be able to apply for Healthcare.gov plans as early as 60 days before their Medicaid/PeachCare coverage ends and up until July 31, 2024.

However, only those Georgians who earn 100% or more of the federal poverty level ($13,590 for a single person) will qualify.

Those who earn less than the federal poverty level will be able to seek coverage through a new Georgia program, called Georgia Pathways, that launches on July 1.

Under that program, Georgians who work, volunteer, or enroll in educationa­l programs for at least 80 hours per week can also qualify for the state Medicaid program. Estimates of how many people will be eligible for that program vary.

“There may be upwards of 200,000 members already on Medicaid that would qualify for (Pathways),” DCH Commission­er Caylee Noggle told lawmakers in January. “They will be transition­ed to that (program) during their eligibilit­y redetermin­ation if they’re eligible.”

But the number could be much lower, said Colbert of Georgians for a Healthy Future.

“It’s likely then that fewer than 100,000 folks are going to gain coverage because of really difficult bureaucrat­ic work requiremen­ts and premiums that are not standard for the Medicaid program,” Colbert said this week.

 ?? Contribute­d ?? Salvador Gonzalez (left), program director and instructor of Diesel Equipment Technology at Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College (GNTC), stands with Dr. Heidi Popham, president of GNTC, after being named First Runner-Up for the Technical College System of Georgia’s 2023 Rick Perkins Instructor of the Year.
Contribute­d Salvador Gonzalez (left), program director and instructor of Diesel Equipment Technology at Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College (GNTC), stands with Dr. Heidi Popham, president of GNTC, after being named First Runner-Up for the Technical College System of Georgia’s 2023 Rick Perkins Instructor of the Year.

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