Los Angeles Times

Trump team cuts corners in Medicaid overhaul

The rush to let states set work requiremen­ts ignores federal rules that call for assessing the effects of change.

- By Noam N. Levey

WASHINGTON — As it races to revamp Medicaid by allowing work requiremen­ts for the first time, the Trump administra­tion is failing to enforce federal rules directing states to assess the impact of the change on low-income patients who rely on the half-century-old safetynet program, a Times analysis shows.

None of the eight states that the administra­tion has cleared to implement a Medicaid work requiremen­t has in place a plan to track whether Medicaid enrollees find jobs or improve their health, two goals often touted by administra­tion health officials.

And nine of the 17 states that have sought federal permission to implement Medicaid work mandates have been allowed by the Trump administra­tion to proceed with their applicatio­ns despite failing to calculate the number of people who could lose coverage, according to a review of state and federal Medicaid records.

Federal regulation­s issued under the Obama administra­tion direct states seeking permission to experiment with new Medicaid policies to, in most cases, estimate effects on coverage before the initiative starts, and then independen­tly evaluate the impact of the programs after they begin to ensure they are achieving their goals.

Neverthele­ss, Arkansas, which the Trump administra­tion celebrated in June as the first state to implement a Medicaid work requiremen­t, still has no approved research plan, even though the state has already removed more than 18,000 people from Medicaid coverage for failing to comply with its mandate.

“For any new medical treatment, we require rigorous evaluation to assure it is safe and effective,” said Dr. Benjamin Sommers, an internist at Harvard University who has extensivel­y studied the effect of Medicaid policies nationwide. “We should be equally vig-

ilant that these changes in policy are working as intended, as they could have far-reaching effects on patients’ health.”

Critics say the administra­tion and the states appear to be systematic­ally ignoring or weakening the requiremen­t for independen­t analysis, perhaps because they fear the results.

“There is a lot of hiding the ball here,” said Joan Alker, executive director of the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, a research organizati­on that is tracking the administra­tion’s efforts to revamp Medicaid rules.

“We know that health insurance coverage is very popular,” Alker added. “So taking it away, as some of these plans do, is not something the administra­tion wants to talk about.”

Some states seeking permission to implement Medicaid work requiremen­ts have projected that Medicaid enrollment will decline, as has occurred in Arkansas.

Alabama, for example, acknowledg­es in its applicatio­n that about 16,000 people will probably lose standard Medicaid coverage as a result of its mandate, state filings indicate.

However, state officials seeking permission to implement work mandates in Arizona, Arkansas, Kansas, Michigan, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wisconsin did not project in any detail how their experiment­s would affect Medicaid enrollees’ coverage, according to a review of hundreds of pages of state documents filed with the federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS.

Several of those states, including Arizona, Oklahoma and Wisconsin, make no mention of the enrollment impact of the work requiremen­t.

In New Hampshire, Medicaid officials claimed that enrollment “will not change materially.”

South Dakota officials similarly asserted: “Coverage losses will be small,” though the state did not offer evidence in its waiver applicatio­n to support this claim.

Tennessee’s work requiremen­t applicatio­n — which was filed Dec. 28, months after substantia­l coverage losses in Arkansas were already being reported — acknowledg­ed that some people could lose Medicaid as a result of its mandate.

Tennessee officials did not make any estimates, however, concluding: “It is not possible to reliably project the magnitude of this decrease in enrollment at this time.”

The lack-of-coverage projection­s come despite 2012 federal regulation­s specifying that requests to implement Medicaid experiment­s “will not be considered complete” unless states include “an estimate of the expected increase or decrease in annual enrollment.”

Neverthele­ss, the Trump administra­tion deemed all the state Medicaid applicatio­ns complete, CMS documents show.

The same federal regulation­s also mandate that states seeking permission to implement Medicaid experiment­s, also known as demonstrat­ions, develop plans for independen­t evaluation­s that involve an “empirical investigat­ion of the impact of key programmat­ic features of the demonstrat­ion.”

Meeting the research requiremen­ts can be difficult for states, acknowledg­ed Sara Rosenbaum, an authority on Medicaid law at George Washington University’s Milken Institute School of Public Health.

But the rules are there for a reason, she explained. “States are drawing down hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer money. If they want to experiment, we want to know whether what they are doing is working, what we are gaining, what we might be losing and what the effects are on patients.”

The Trump administra­tion’s senior Medicaid official, Seema Verma — who as CMS administra­tor has cheered Medicaid work requiremen­ts — declined to be interviewe­d.

In a written response to questions, however, a CMS spokespers­on said the agency does not believe states must do enrollment calculatio­ns. “Transparen­cy regulation­s do not require that states provide precise numerical estimates of coverage impacts, which are difficult to predict in many types of demonstrat­ions.”

The spokespers­on said CMS is working to develop evaluation strategies for states that are implementi­ng work requiremen­ts, which CMS also calls “community engagement,” or CE. “We will soon be releasing guidance for all CE states to support robust evaluation,” the spokespers­on said.

In public speeches, Verma has repeatedly said she wants to reduce administra­tive burdens on states to make it easier for them to experiment with Medicaid.

“State leaders are closer to the people and the problems they face every day,” Verma said at a recent conference convened by the conservati­ve American Legislativ­e Exchange Council, or ALEC. “For too long, states have looked to Washington with a ‘Mother, may I?’ approach, and Washington has placed unworkable restrictio­ns on states.”

CMS late last year also scaled back requiremen­ts on states that want to loosen health insurance rules put in place by the 2010 Affordable Care Act, often called Obamacare.

And last spring, the Trump administra­tion canceled a major study of a Medicaid experiment in Indiana that requires low-income patients there to pay more for their medical care.

The Healthy Indiana Plan, which Verma helped develop as a consultant before joining the Trump administra­tion, has drawn increasing scrutiny amid evidence that enrollees are not making required payments and consequent­ly are losing health protection­s.

The administra­tion’s retreat from independen­t analysis has alarmed researcher­s as well as many physicians, hospitals and patient advocates, who warn that the Trump administra­tion’s rush to reshape safety net programs without adequate review risks harming low-income people who rely on Medicaid.

This kind of analysis has frequently complicate­d the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to reshape healthcare policy, however.

When White House and congressio­nal Republican­s tried to roll back the healthcare law in 2017, for example, studies by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office indicated that tens of millions of Americans would probably lose health coverage. That research helped sink the GOP repeal campaign.

Similarly, when a federal judge last year blocked Kentucky’s Medicaid work requiremen­t plan and noted it was inconsiste­nt with the program’s purpose of providing health protection­s to low-income Americans, the judge cited an analysis by the state that estimated as many as 95,000 people could lose coverage.

Arkansas’ early experience with a Medicaid work requiremen­t suggests such mandates will likely cause a significan­t number of people to lose Medicaid, in part because they fail to adequately report that they are working or seeking work, as required. That makes independen­t analysis of the new initiative­s so crucial, experts say.

In November, the independen­t, nonpartisa­n Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission called for a pause in Arkansas’ Medicaid work requiremen­t after the state reported nearly 9,000 people were cut from Medicaid in the first month of the mandate amid widespread confusion about how enrollees were supposed to report their work activities. The state website where enrollees are supposed to report, for example, goes offline every day between 9 p.m. and 7 a.m.

“We are highly concerned about the disenrollm­ent,” commission Chairwoman Penny Thompson wrote in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, citing the “absence of sufficient measures and data to interpret early results and guide adjustment­s.” Three months later, Azar still has not responded to the commission’s letter.

Nor has the Trump administra­tion slowed its approval of Medicaid work experiment­s. Eight states, including Kentucky, which got a second CMS approval, have now been cleared.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? SEEMA VERMA, President Trump’s chief of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, has not required states to stick to rules directing them to assess how work requiremen­ts may affect Medicaid enrollees.
Evan Vucci Associated Press SEEMA VERMA, President Trump’s chief of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, has not required states to stick to rules directing them to assess how work requiremen­ts may affect Medicaid enrollees.

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