USA TODAY US Edition

People with disabiliti­es scramble for answers

Many have lost benefits in Medicaid ‘unwinding’

- Daniel Chang

Jacqueline Saa has a genetic condition that leaves her unable to stand and walk on her own or hold a job. Every weekday for four years, Saa, 43, has relied on a home health aide to help her cook, bathe and dress, go to the doctor, pick up medication­s and accomplish other daily tasks.

She received coverage through Florida’s Medicaid program until it abruptly stopped at the end of March, she said.

“Every day the anxiety builds,” said Saa, who lost her home health aide for 11 days, starting April 1, despite being eligible. The state has since restored Saa’s home health aide service, but she leaned on her mother and her 23and 15-year-old daughters while struggling to regain her Medicaid benefits.

“It’s just so much to worry about,” she said. “This is a health care system that’s supposed to help.”

Medicaid’s home and communityb­ased services are designed to help people like Saa with disabiliti­es and who need help with everyday activities, stay out of a nursing facility. But people are losing benefits with little or no notice, getting bad advice when they call for informatio­n, and facing major disruption­s in care while they

wait for the issue to get sorted out, according to attorneys and advocates who are hearing from patients.

In Colorado, Texas, and Washington, D.C., the National Health Law Program, a nonprofit that advocates for lowincome and underserve­d people, has filed civil rights complaints with two federal agencies alleging discrimina­tion against people with disabiliti­es. The group has not filed a lawsuit in Florida, though its attorneys say they’ve heard of many of the same problems there.

Attorneys nationwide say the special needs of disabled people were not prioritize­d as states began to review eligibilit­y for Medicaid enrollees after a pandemic-era mandate for coverage expired in March 2023.

“Instead of monitoring and ensuring that people with disabiliti­es could make their way through the process, they sort of treated them like everyone else with Medicaid,” said Elizabeth Edwards, a senior attorney for the National Health Law Program. Federal law puts an “obligation on states to make sure people with disabiliti­es don’t get missed.”

At least 21 million people nationwide have been disenrolle­d from Medicaid since states began eligibilit­y redetermin­ations in spring 2023, according to a KFF analysis.

The unwinding, as it’s known, is an immense undertakin­g, Edwards said, and some states did not take extra steps to set up a special telephone line for those with disabiliti­es, for example, so people could renew their coverage or contact a case manager.

The Florida Department of Children and Families, which verifies eligibilit­y for the state’s Medicaid program, has a specialize­d team that processes applicatio­ns for home health services, said Mallory McManus, the department’s communicat­ions director.

People with disabiliti­es disenrolle­d from Medicaid services were “properly noticed and either did not respond timely or no longer met financial eligibilit­y requiremen­ts,” McManus said, noting that people “would have been contacted by us up to 13 times via phone, mail, email, and text before processing their disenrollm­ent.”

Allison Pellegrin, of Ormond Beach, who lives with her blind and cognitivel­y disabled sister, Rhea Whitaker, said that never happened for her family.

“They just cut off the benefits without a call, without a letter or anything stating that the benefits would be terminatin­g,” Pellegrin said. Her sister’s home health aide, whom she had used every day for nearly eight years, stopped service for 12 days. “If I’m getting everything else in the mail,” she said, “it seems weird that after 13 times I wouldn’t have received one of them.”

Pellegrin, 58, a sales manager who gets health insurance through her employer, took time off from work to care for Whitaker, 56, who was disabled by a severe brain injury in 2006.

Medicaid reviews have been complicate­d, in part, by the fact that eligibilit­y works differentl­y for home health services than it does for general coverage, based on federal regulation­s that give states more flexibilit­y to determine financial eligibilit­y. Income limits for home health services are higher, for instance, and assets are counted differentl­y.

In Texas, for example, a parent in a household of three would be limited to earning no more than $344 a month to qualify for Medicaid. And most adults with a disability can qualify without a dependent child and be eligible for Medicaid home health services with an income of up to $2,800 a month.

The state was not taking that into considerat­ion, said Terry Anstee, a supervisin­g attorney for community integratio­n at Disability Rights Texas, a nonprofit advocacy group.

Even a brief lapse in Medicaid home health services can fracture relationsh­ips that took years to build.

“It may be very difficult for that person who lost that attendant to find another attendant,” Anstee said, due to workforce shortages for attendants and nurses and high demand.

Nearly all states have a waiting list for home health services. About 700,000 people were on waiting lists in 2023, most of them with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, according to KFF data.

Daniel Tsai, a deputy administra­tor at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said the federal agency that regulates Medicaid is committed to ensuring that people with disabiliti­es who receive home health services “can renew their Medicaid coverage with as little red tape as possible.”

KFF Health News found that multiple audits of Colorado’s eligibilit­y system, managed by Deloitte, uncovered errors in notices sent to enrollees. A 2023 review by the Colorado Office of the State Auditor found that 90% of sampled notices contained problems, including some that violated the state’s Medicaid rules. The audit blamed “flaws in system design” for populating notices with incorrect dates.

Deloitte declined to comment on specific state issues.

In March, Colorado officials paused disenrollm­ent for people on Medicaid who received home health services, which includes people with disabiliti­es, after a “system update” led to wrongful terminatio­ns in February.

Another common problem is people being told to reapply, which immediatel­y cuts off their benefits, instead of appealing the cancellati­on, which would ensure their coverage while the claim is investigat­ed, said attorney Miriam Harmatz, founder of the Florida Health Justice Project.

“What they’re being advised to do is not appropriat­e. The best way to protect their legal rights,” Harmatz said, “is to file an appeal.”

But some disabled people are worried about having to repay the cost of their care.

Saa, who lives in Davie, Florida, received a letter shortly before her benefits were cut that said that she “may be responsibl­e to repay any benefits” if she lost her appeal.

The state should presume such people are still eligible and preserve their coverage, Harmatz, of the Health Justice

Project, said, because income and assets for most beneficiar­ies are not going to increase significan­tly and their conditions are not likely to improve.

As states prepared for the unwinding, CMS advised states that they must give people with disabiliti­es the help they need to benefit from the program, including specialize­d communicat­ions for people who are deaf and blind. The Florida Department of Children and Families would not say how many people with disabiliti­es had lost Medicaid home health services.

But in Miami-Dade, Florida’s most populous county, the Alliance for Aging, a nonprofit that helps older and disabled people apply for Medicaid, saw requests for help jump from 58 in March to 146 in April, said Lisa Mele, the organizati­on’s director of its Aging and Disability Resources Center.

“So many people are calling us,” she said.

States are not tracking the numbers, so “the impact is not clear,” Edwards said. “It’s a really complicate­d struggle.”

Saa filed an appeal on March 29 after learning from her social worker that her benefits would expire at the end of the month. She went to the agency but couldn’t stand in a line that was 100 people deep. Calls to the state’s Medicaid eligibilit­y review agency were fruitless, she said.

“When they finally connected me to a customer service representa­tive, she was literally just reading the same explanatio­n letter that I’ve read,” Saa said. “I did everything in my power.”

Saa canceled her home health aide. She lives on limited Social Security disability income and said she could not afford to pay for the care.

On April 10, she received a letter from the state saying her Medicaid had been reinstated, but she later learned that her plan did not cover home health care.

The following day, Saa said, advocates put her in touch with a point person at Florida’s Medicaid agency who restored her benefits. A home health aide showed up April 12. Saa said she’s thankful but feels anxious about the future.

“The toughest part of that period is knowing that that can happen at any time,” she said, “and not because of anything I did wrong.”

Contributi­ng: Samantha Liss and Rachana Pradhan, KFF Health News

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF – the independen­t source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

 ?? PROVIDED BY JACQUELINE SAA ?? Jacqueline Saa has a progressiv­e genetic condition that leaves her unable to stand and walk on her own. Through Florida’s Medicaid program, she hired a home health aide to help her with various everyday tasks, but her coverage abruptly stopped at the end of March.
PROVIDED BY JACQUELINE SAA Jacqueline Saa has a progressiv­e genetic condition that leaves her unable to stand and walk on her own. Through Florida’s Medicaid program, she hired a home health aide to help her with various everyday tasks, but her coverage abruptly stopped at the end of March.
 ?? PROVIDED BY ALLISON PELLEGRIN ?? Rhea Whitaker’s home health aide care was cut for 12 days and she did not receive any notice. Whitaker’s sister, Allison Pellegrin, took time off from work to take care of Whitaker, who was disabled by a severe brain injury in 2006.
PROVIDED BY ALLISON PELLEGRIN Rhea Whitaker’s home health aide care was cut for 12 days and she did not receive any notice. Whitaker’s sister, Allison Pellegrin, took time off from work to take care of Whitaker, who was disabled by a severe brain injury in 2006.

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