Seeking Answers on Medicaid Expansion

Seeking Answers on Medicaid Expansion

The success of the health reform implementation hinges on a broad Medicaid expansion, but state officials have significant questions as they grapple with new requirements. Meanwhile, the reform law likely prevents the governor's proposed budget cuts to state health insurance programs.

The success of the health reform in reducing the uninsured population hinges on a broad Medicaid expansion, with roughly 16 million Americans projected to gain coverage through the program. Many state officials have significant questions as they prepare implementation timelines and financial projections.

About 60 million Americans were enrolled in Medicaid in 2009 at a cost of $380 billion. States shoulder more than 40% of this cost, on average.

By 2014, the health reform law establishes a new national floor of Medicaid eligibility: 133% of the poverty level, or roughly $14,400 for an individual in 2009 and about $29,326 for a family of four. The law also permits states to extend Medicaid coverage to childless adults, a category previously excluded from the program, unless states obtained a waiver to do so or funded such coverage using only state money.

There are wide variations in states’ current eligibility rules, and some states already cover populations with annual incomes higher than 133% of the poverty level. However, the new eligibility baseline may effectively double Medicaid enrollment in a handful of states that currently have lower eligibility limits, namely Florida, Nevada and Texas, according to Stateline.org.

Estimates on states’ cost to foot this expansion wildly diverge, and Ann Kohler, health director for the American Public Human Services Association, notes that “each state has to do its own math.”

That calculus depends on whether the state qualifies as an “expansion state” — essentially, if it already expanded Medicaid coverage to childless adults. For so-called expansion states, the federal government would shoulder only a fraction of the cost of their expansion in 2014 but increase its share of the cost in 2020. Non-expansion states like California, meanwhile, would receive more federal funding upfront, though the money would taper off by 2020.

States also have questions about whether Medicaid changes will abrogate the need for safety-net programs that sprang up to fill coverage gaps. In California, the expansion casts doubt on the future of Healthy San Francisco — a near-universal care program that covers about 51,000 of the city’s uninsured residents — although officials say they are committed to the initiative, given that thousands of enrollees are undocumented immigrants who will not qualify for coverage under the health reform law.

Despite the questions, consensus has emerged on several implications for California:

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