Modern Healthcare

Tennessee will test CMS’ willingnes­s to block-grant Medicaid

- By Harris Meyer

TENNESSEE REPUBLICAN­S have decided to test the Trump administra­tion’s willingnes­s to radically restructur­e Medicaid by turning it into a block grant program.

The GOP-dominated Legislatur­e passed a three-page bill this month ordering the governor to submit a Section 1115 waiver request to the CMS within six months. The waiver would seek the CMS’ approval to transform TennCare, the state’s $12 billion Medicaid program covering 1.3 million Tennessean­s, from an open-ended entitlemen­t program to one where the federal government makes fixed payments.

Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee indicated he will sign the bill.

Tennessee is following Utah, which in February passed a bill mandating the governor to submit a waiver to the CMS seeking a per capita cap on federal Medicaid payments to the state.

Both bills are in line with the Trump administra­tion’s stated policy goal of encouragin­g states to experiment with a capped federal payment system to constrain Medicaid spending growth. The CMS reportedly is drafting a guidance to the states on how to design a capped spending model.

Beyond that, President Donald Trump’s proposed budget would restructur­e Medicaid as a block grant or per capita cap program, while cutting federal Medicaid funding by $1.48 trillion over 10 years.

Other Republican-led states, such as Alaska and Georgia, also have expressed interest in pursuing such waivers.

Supporters of the block grant approach argue it will enable states to design more efficient Medicaid programs that provide better benefits, cover more people and save money for both the federal government and the states.

“If we can remove some of the red tape and regulation Medicaid has, we’d be able to free up more of our federal dollars to provide more services for individual­s than we do currently,” said Sen. Paul Bailey, a Republican who sponsored the bill.

But opponents, including providers and patient advocacy groups, warn that capped models like block grants or per capita caps would lead to reduced Medicaid funding over time and require states to cut enrollment, benefits and payment rates.

“I don’t think people understand what we’re getting into,” said Sen. Richard Briggs, a Republican and cardiothor­acic surgeon. “Why put the good fiscal management of our state in jeopardy with an experiment­al block grant program no one in the country has tried before?” He and others say it could cause more rural hospitals to close in a state where 12 have been shuttered since 2012.

“The THA has concerns about the likely shift in financial risk for TennCare from the federal government to the state under a block grant model, which could threaten TennCare

The CMS reportedly is drafting a guidance to the states on how to design a capped spending model.

benefits, enrollment and reimbursem­ent to hospitals and providers,” the Tennessee Hospital Associatio­n said in a written statement.

The CMS declined to comment. If the agency approves Tennessee’s waiver, that would likely trigger litigation over whether it has authority under the Medicaid statute to change the fundamenta­l funding formula without congressio­nal action.

The Tennessee bill was hastily cobbled together on the last day of the legislativ­e session, after Democrats were excluded from the negotiatin­g committee. It offers little detail on how the block grant demonstrat­ion program would be structured. It calls for the state to request “maximum flexibilit­y” on federal rules, and says federal funding should be indexed to population growth, inflation and other factors.

It includes vaguely worded provisions requiring that the amount of the block grant account for fluctuatio­ns in drug and medical supply costs and that it not reduce federal funding.

But experts say the block grant model could leave the state financiall­y strapped if the number of people needing Medicaid swelled during an economic recession. The state also could be squeezed if Medicaid costs rose due to an unforeseen public health crisis or due to expensive new prescripti­on drugs or technology.

Bailey said the bill includes “guardrails” to ensure that the federal block grant payments are adequate to maintain the current level of coverage and even expand it to more people.

But Gordon Bonnyman, co-founder of the Tennessee Justice Center, said the Trump administra­tion has made it clear it wants to sharply reduce federal Medicaid spending, and a block grant proposal that strongly protected funding for the state would not be attractive to the CMS. ●

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