Title: Californias Express Enrollment Program
1Californias Express Enrollment Program
- Lessons and Next Steps
- September 2006
The Childrens Partnership/ The 100 Campaign
2Express Enrollment Why Now?
- Three year pilot/evaluation complete
- Lessons learned/best practices revealed
- Incorporating those lessons now
- Taking those lessons to the next stage
3Express Lane Eligibility and Express Enrollment
- ELE Using Other Public Programs Application and
Enrollment Processes to Enroll in Public Health
Coverage Programs - EE the term given to ELE program that expedites
Medi-Cal (MC) enrollment for uninsured children
who receive free school meals enacted by AB 59
(Cedillo) in 2001 and SB 1196 (Cedillo) in 2004
4Piloting Express Enrollment
- Began July 2003 5 pilot school districts (70
schools) LA, Fresno, San Diego, Redwood City
(San Mateo) and Alum Rock (Santa Clara) - 10 districts implemented by 2005-06 school year
- Deliberately small
- Evaluation by USC focused on data from 7 school
districts
5Express Enrollment How it Works
- School Lunch Application modified to include
information required to make initial MC
eligibility determination and to request consent - Applications with consent and FREE school
lunch-eligible are processed for EE - Schools make presumptive MC certification and
sends applications to county - Schools send families a letter informing them of
status
6Express Enrollment How it Works
- Counties provide temporary coverage within 5
working days - County sends all families one page form
- County makes final eligibility determination
- Childrens applications where income is too high
are forwarded to Healthy Families (HFP) - Childrens whose applications appear to make them
eligible for a local Healthy Kids program are
forwarded to Healthy Kids
7Express Enrollment Results
- Express Enrollment was successful in reaching and
connecting uninsured children to temporary
coverage - Challenges to the process and linking children to
ongoing coverage - The Numbers
- 11,500 children applied for EE over 3 years
- 7,000 processed by counties
- Of these, 44 already enrolled in MC or HFP
- 68 of the rest received temp. coverage
- 40 of children that received temp. coverage
received ongoing coverage
8Express Enrollment Results
- School districts like the program
- Families like the process
- Children accessing needed care during temporary
coverage period - Clinical, dental, pharmacy, lab/x-ray and
specialty care
9Express Enrollment Lessons Learned
- What Worked
- School Lunch Program is a fruitful gateway to
health insurance and enrolling children in
Medi-Cal - If EE were applied statewide, it could reach up
to 500,000 uninsured children - Reached hard to reach children
- Helped families
- Temporary coverage until determination
- Because the SL application is a MC application
- Self declaration of income
- County/School Relationships
10Express Enrollment Lessons Learned
- What would make Express Enrollment and other
Gateways work better to enroll uninsured children
into immediate and continued health coverage? - Technology to screen for insured children
- Information collected in one step
- Inclusion of Healthy Families and county programs
- Financing
- Federal flexibility
11Express Enrollment Next Steps
- School districts can implement now
- Moving toward a statewide unified enrollment
system--Building on the best policies of EE and
harnessing available/new technology to truly
streamline health insurance enrollment for all
children through gateways such as SL, CHDP, and
WIC - Proposition 86
- SB 437
- Center for HealthCare Access/SB 1948
- Moving federal policy
12Express EnrollmentMore Information
- Express Lane Eligibility Web Site
- http//www.expresslaneinfo.org
- 100 Percent Campaign
- http//www.100percentcampaign.org