Title: Update: Children
1Update Childrens Health Care and More
900 Lydia Street - Austin, Texas 78702 Phone
(512) 320-0222 fax (512) 320-0227 - www.cppp.org
- The University of Texas at Austin
- LBJ School of Public Affairs
- February 14, 2006
- Anne Dunkelberg, Assistant Director
(dunkelberg_at_cppp.org)
2Texas Health Insurance System
- US Census Bureau Statistics
- Approximately 5.6 million Texans uninsured in
2004 - 25.1 of Texans of all ages were uninsured
- 27.6 of Texans under age of 65 were uninsured
- Another three million Texans covered by Medicaid
or CHIP - Why are so many Texans uninsured?
- Low percentage of employer-sponsored
insurance (ESI) - 9 below national average for lt 65 (54.2, vs.
63.2) - 9.3 below national average for lt18
- Approximately 83 of Texas Medicaid recipients
are below poverty - Only 14.5 of Americans below poverty have ESI
3Texas Health Insurance System
- In other words, 2/3 of uninsured Texas children
are below 200 FPL, despite public coverage
options. - Texas is home to an estimated 230,000
undocumented kids and another 160,000 legal
immigrant (LPR) children under age 18 (Pew
Hispanic Center). - The LPR kids can participate in CHIP.
- Clearly, undocumented children are just a small
part of our uninsured problem - About 700,000 (half) of our uninsured kids could
enroll in Medicaid or CHIP! - Kids Count 3-year average 6.493 million aged
0-18 6. 23 million aged 0-17
4Medicaid in Texas Who it Helps
- Medicaid
- As of December 2005, 2.7 million Texans were
enrolled in Medicaid - 1.8 million were children
- about 89,700 of these children, or 5, were
receiving disability-related Medicaid (98 of
these on SSI) - about 12,500 were pregnant teens (0.7 of the
kids 0.5 of all Medicaid) - 141,700 in TANF cash assistance families (5.2 of
total caseload) - OTHER 1.6 MILLION predominantly in WORKING POOR
FAMILIES - (about 1.3 million worker-headed families,
- Other 20 are headed by disabled parents or
living on child support from non-custodial
parent) - 898,500 were adults
- 691,000 (77 of the adults) were elderly or
disabled. Adults on SSI account for 60 of the
aged and disabled recipients - Other adults 91,500 maternity coverage 31,000
TANF parents (1.1 of total caseload) - NOTE there are fewer than 95,000 poor parents on
Texas Medicaid- see next slide. 63,000 either
TMA (Transitional Medicaid Assistance) or parents
who are at or below TANF income, but not
receiving TANF cash assistance - Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
- as of September 1, 2003 507,259 children
- as of December 1, 2005 322,898 (drop of
184,361, or 36)
5Why Very Few Poor Parents are Enrolled in Texas
Medicaid
- Texas Medicaid income cap for poor parents has
not been increased by our Legislature for 20
years. - Working poor parents in Texas can get Medicaid
now ONLY if they earn less than the
legislatively-imposed income cap of 188 per
month for a family of 3 (308 if one parent is
working). - This fixed dollar amount cap, does not increase
from year to year with inflation. In 2006 this
income cap denies Medicaid to parents with
incomes above 13.6 of the federal poverty
income. - Forces poor parents with high medical needs to
choose between work and health care 15 hours of
work per week at minimum wage (5.15 per hour)
makes them too well off to get Medicaid. - Texas can increase the Medicaid income limit for
parents to any level it chooses, without any
special federal approval. The only limiting
factor is our willingness to put up our states
share (about 40) of the costs. - Today, fewer than 95,000 poor Texas parents get
Medicaid, though - there are about 836,000 poor parents in the state
- 61 of adult Texans 18-64 below poverty are
uninsured - 1.8 million Texas children have Medicaid coverage
6Texas Medicaid Who it Helps
December 2005, HHSC data.
Total enrolled 12/1/2005 2,707,681
7Medicaid Cuts What was Reversed by 2005
Legislature
- Adults Medicaid Services Restored (eff. 10/05)
- Podiatrists
- Eyeglasses and Hearing Aids
- Mental health services (eff. 12/05) by social
workers, psychologists, licensed professional
counselors, and licensed marriage and family
therapists. There was complication with the
funding for this benefit, but it appears services
by all 4 mental health provider types were
restored December 1, 2005. - http//www.hhsc.state.tx.us/medicaid/cs/Medicaid_B
enefitsUpdate.html
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
8Medicaid Cuts What was Reversedby 2005
Legislature
- Might be restored (but no action yet!)
- The Personal Needs Allowance of Medicaid nursing
home residents (the monthly amount that Medicaid
nursing home residents may keep from SSI, Social
Security or other pension income the rest goes
to the nursing home) - was cut in 2003 from 60 to 45.
- Not restored by the budget or other 2005 bill,
but Gov. Perry and Senator Zaffirini have pledged
to ask LBB for budget execution to allocate the
13 million in state dollars needed to restore
this. - Scheduled LBB meeting (9/05) delayed due to
hurricanes Katrina and Rita none scheduled
since, STAY TUNED!
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
9Medicaid Cuts What was Reversed by 2005
Legislature
- Not exactly restored
- Medically Needy Spend-Down Program for Parents
(Temporary Coverage for Poor Families with
Catastrophic Medical Bills) - HHSC estimated that full restoration of MN would
cost 175 million GR for 2006-2007 SB1
authorizes just 35 million for partial
restoration AND assumes this will be funded
entirely by voluntary contributions of local tax
dollars (IGT) from the big urban hospital
districts - Also says 20 million GR could be added to this
IF the local funds are provided first (the 20
million would come from savings achieved due to
the Womens Health and Family Planning Waiver,
more later on this) - No action so far to restore, and no indications
it is likely to happen. STAY TUNED!
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
10Medicaid Cuts that Remain
- Medicaid and CHIP provider rate cuts
- Most Medicaid and CHIP providers had rates cut in
2003 hospitals and doctors had a rate cut of
2.5 nursing homes 1.75, and community care
providers 1.1. - In August 2004, HHSC proposed and LBB approved
keeping most the cuts at the same level for 2005
(i.e., not making deeper cuts) but hospitals
took a deeper 5 cut. - 2005 legislature restored rates to 2003 levels
for Community Care services and Waivers, and for
ICF-MR (all at DADS), but not for doctors, other
professionals, hospitals, or CHIP. - All other rate cuts remain. Rate cuts were the
largest HHS cut made in 2003 much larger than
the CHIP cuts.
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
11Income Caps for Texas Medicaid and CHIP, 2006
21,708
33,200
30,710/yr
30,710/yr
22,078/yr
222
200
16,600
7,236
185
185
2,256
3,696
133
100
74
13.6
22.3
Income Limit as Percentage of Federal Poverty
Income Annual Income is for a family of 3,
except Individual Incomes shown for SSI and Long
Term Care
12Community Care and Waiting Listsfunding for
enrollment increases
- 2003 Legislature reduced numbers and/or levels of
services in capped Community Care and Health
programs - 2006-2007 budget provides funds to increase a
number of non-entitlement programs enrollment - For children
- MDCP increased from 977 in 03, 983 in 05, to
1,993 in 2007. - CSHCN increased from 1,463 in 03, 2,114 in 05,
to 2,293 in 07 - Most Medicaid waivers, HIV Meds increased
- Exceptions
- CBA was 30,279 in 03 26,100 in 05 to 28,401
in 07, - Kidney Health Program 22,834 in 03 21,247 in
05 to 20,415 in 07 - In-Home and Family Support for aged disabled,
MR still below 03 levels (MH IHFS program
eliminated in 03 and not restored)
13Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
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14- HHSC projected in 11/05 Medicaid expenditures v.
appropriations shortfall of 559.4 million GR for
2006-2007 - Lions share is due to assumed expenditure of
444.2 million GR projected for Texas Part D
claw-back payment. (Gov. Perry line-item vetoed
this funding).
15CHIP Cuts, 2004-05 Budget
- Summary of 2003 CHIP changes
- Benefits eliminated dental vision (eyeglasses
and exams) hospice skilled nursing facilities
tobacco cessation chiropractic services. Mental
health coverage was reduced to about half of the
coverage provided in 2003 - Premiums and co-payments increased
- Coverage period reduced from 12 months to six
- New coverage delayed for 90 days
- Income deductions eliminated (gross income
determines eligibility) - Asset test (limit) added for those above 150 of
the poverty Line (took effect August 2004) - Outreach and marketing reduced
- Underlined Items Restored by 2005 Legislature
16How CHIP Fared in 2005 Session
- Restored Dental, vision, hospice and mental
health benefits restored to 2003 levels. Dental
delayed HHSC says will begin April 2006. - Funding to replace monthly premiums with more
affordable and convenient enrollment fees. To be
applied beginning 1/06 - No enrollment fee below 133 of the federal
poverty level (FPL) (lt2,145/ family of 4) - 25 per family (per 6-month period) from 133-150
FPL (2,145-2,419/family of 4) - 35 per family (per 6-month period) from
151-185 FPL (2,420-2,983/family of 4) and - 50 per family (per 6-month period) from
186-200 FPL (2,984-3,225/family of 4)
17How CHIP Fared in 2005 Session
- None of the CHIP restoration bills ever had a
public hearing, not even Senator Averitts SB 59.
Restorations made were all done via the budget. - These 2003 Changes Remain
- Coverage period reduced from 12 months to six.
Language in law now makes this permanent, rather
than planning for a return to 12 month coverage
at a future date. - New coverage delayed for 90 days. (New perinatal
coverage could eliminate this for many newborns.) - Income deductions eliminated (gross income
determines eligibility). - Asset test (limit) added for those above 150 of
the poverty line (took effect August 2004). - Outreach and marketing were reduced in 04-05,
important to monitor and push for strong
investment in both in 06-07.
18Texas Child Medicaid and CHIP Combined
Enrollment (January 2002-December 2005)
Source All figures from Texas Health and Human
Services Commission Compares most recent month
with September 2003
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
19CHIP Caseloads Now and Projected
Rider 57 HHSC (SB 1) requires agency to request
more for CHIP from LBB if needed for
enrollment and benefits.
20New CHIP Perinatal Coverage Planned
- Last-minute addition to the budget bill
authorized this (Rider 70 HHSC). No previous
bill or public discussion, but agency had done
significant lead work behind the scenes. - HHSC plans start-up 9/2006. The benefit and
eligibility belong to the perinate, not the
mother. Will provide prenatal care and delivery
to women 186-200 FPL (who make too much for
Medicaid). - ALSO will pick up mothers 0-200 FPL who do not
qualify for Medicaid maternity coverage because
they are either a legal immigrant or an
undocumented resident. This means that many of
the covered perinates would already have been
eligible for Medicaid at birth, i.e. all those
with incomes below 185 FPL.
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
21New CHIP Perinatal Coverage Planned
- At some point before or at the first birthday,
Medicaid-eligible children will be switched back
to that program. - Of the nearly 48,000 perinates per month
projected in FY 2007, over 39,000 are infants who
would have been enrolled in Medicaid under
current rules, and about 8,300 are perinates who
would not have been covered without this option. - 7 states have these programs (AR, IL, MA, MN, MI,
RI, WA) all but AR provided prenatal care to
immigrants with state dollars before the CHIP
program. - Some controversy because (1) created under
federal rule (not law) and (2) gives person
status to the unborn.
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
22Womens Health and Family Planning Medicaid
Waiver
- SB 747 by Senator John Carona,.
- Texas Medicaid will provide basic medical
check-ups and birth control services to adult
Texas women (ages 18 and older) up to 185 of the
poverty line (thats 2,481 per month pre-tax
income for a family of 3 in 2005). - Currently in Texas, working mothers must live at
or below 23 of the FPL to qualify for Medicaid
(23 of poverty is less than 308 per month for a
family of 3) and childless women cant qualify at
all so the waiver could help many thousands of
women who cant get full Medicaid benefits. - Texas has the highest of uninsured women aged
18 to 64 (28.3) in the nation (the U.S. average
is 17.7) - About 40 of all Texas women live below 200 of
poverty, and 50 of them are uninsured. - HHSC still negotiating details with CMS,
tentative September 2006 start-up .
23Womens Health and Family Planning Medicaid Waiver
- Services covered will include
- well-woman exams,
- counseling and education on contraceptive
methods, - provision of contraception,
- screenings for diabetes, breast and cervical
cancer, sexually transmitted diseases,
hypertension, cholesterol and tuberculosis, - risk assessment and referral of medical problems
to appropriate providers. - It is against federal and state law to use
Medicaid funds for abortion, and SB 747
specifically excludes abortion providers. - The bill also excludes coverage of emergency
contraceptives. - Outreach will be critical once the program
starts, so STAY TUNED!!
24Medicaid Buy-in Program for Working Disabled
MBI
- SB 566 by Deuell
- Directs HHSC to develop/start program to allow
working individuals who earn too much to qualify
for Medicaid, but less than 250 FPL
(23,925/year for a single person) to pay
premiums to get Medicaid coverage. - Premiums amounts will depend on income level, and
have 2 parts - one is based on unearned income (like
disability benefits) and - the other part on earned income (like wages from
a job) - Latest HHSC information gives September 2006 as
earliest start-up. Projected to serve about 2,300
in 2007.
25Universal Services Card Medicaid Biometric
Finger Imaging
- Universal Services card authorized (SB 46, by
Nelson) - HHSC can develop a single smart card for use
both as an ID for benefits like Medicaid, Food
Stamps, and TANF, as well as an EBT card (like
the Lone Star card) - CAN include finger imaging
- MUST protect client privacy
- Statewide Expansion of Medicaid Finger Imaging
authorized (SB 563 by Janek) - HHSC can proceed to mandatory statewide use of
finger image cards - Would be done in stages, and HHSC must adopt a
plan for how to deal with lost and forgotten
cards, who to exempt, and how to deal with no
match situations BEFORE expanding - Project must be found cost-effective, but not
clear how this will be evaluated. - HHSC plans to test mandatory finger imaging in
Travis, Cameron, Hidalgo in April 2006.
26Medicaid Managed Care Statewide Expansion (PCCM,
STARPlus, ICM)
- Primary Care Case Management
- PCCM expanded to 197 additional Texas counties on
September 1, 2005 - Some Medicaid clients who do not live in a PCCM
expansion county were enrolled in PCCM by mistake
(should be fixed by now). - Date for clients to pick a PCP was extended to
November 11. - a referral from the client's PCP was not required
until December. To keep up with ongoing issues
with PCP assignment selection, a Primary Care
Provider Change List is updated daily on the TMHP
website. - PCCM Client Helpline 1-888-302-6688
27Medicaid Managed Care Statewide Expansion (PCCM,
STARPlus, ICM)
- STARPLUS
- The STARPLUS managed long term care HMO model
serves aged and disabled Medicaid clients in the
Houston area. - New state laws and the state budget assumed
savings from greater management of care for aged,
blind and disabled Medicaid clients, via three
models of care - a modified STARPLUS HMO model, a new Integrated
Care Management approach, or primary care case
management - reduces Medicaid funding by 109.5 million GR
- A new enhanced PCCM-type Integrated Care
Management (ICM) model will be implemented in
the Dallas-Tarrant service area - Where an HMO-style STARPLUS model is used, the
state will modify the model to protect federal
UPL payments to local public hospitals. - Savings are guaranteed by allowing HHSC to cut
provider rates if the new model does not produce
the required savings. There are specific
targets for each service area e.g., 23.1
million for Bexar in 2006-2007.
28Integrated Eligibility and Enrollment
- June 30, HHSC announced 5-year, 899 million
contract with Accenture (Texas Access Alliance
or TAA), to take over operation of the state's
eligibility and enrollment systems for Medicaid,
CHIP, Food Stamps, and TANF cash assistance. - Local offices will drop from 381 DHS offices to
167 full-service offices and 44 satellite
offices open on certain days only the state will
close 99 eligibility offices. - Four call centers will provide assistance from 8
a.m. to 8 p.m., will receive and process
applications, and consumers will be able to track
their applications through an automated phone
system. - The primary number for assistance will be 2-1-1
calls for eligibility services will be routed to
TAA (not the 211 call centers).
Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
29Integrated Eligibility and Enrollment
- Eventually will be able to apply through the
Internet, over the phone and by fax or mail. - Over 10,000 DHS state eligibility workers in
1997 reduced to 2,900 in IEE (counting the 600
out-stationed workers) - Call centers will employ about 2,500 (total
system about 5,400) - The transition to the new office structure began
in January and will be phased in over a 10-month
period. - First step was takeover of CHIP enrollment in
November (from current contractor, ACS) - New child Medicaid and CHIP apps all going to
TAA - RGV will be last (September 2006, if on
schedule). - Many computer, training, staffing problems are
troubling the transition so far child Medicaid
enrollment dropped by 29,000 from November to
December. - http//www.hhs.state.tx.us/consolidation/IE/Projec
ted_RolloutSchedule.shtml - http//www.hhs.state.tx.us/consolidation/IE/IE.sht
ml
30Katrina and Health Care Texas So far
- Texas waiver allows simplified Medicaid or CHIP
eligibility for Katrina evacuees. -
- Covers, for a one-time period of 5 months,
evacuees who meet Texas current Medicaid or CHIP
categories and income limits. - A major exception is that the disaster coverage
is available to parents (with dependent children)
who have incomes as high as the federal poverty
line (FPL 1,341 per month for a family of 3 in
2005), compared to regular Texas Medicaid, which
only covers parents up to 23 FPL (about 308 per
month for a family of 3, or even less if the
parent is not working). - Childless adults are not included in this
Medicaid coverage, but costs for such adults were
paid for under an uncompensated care pool, thru
1/31/06.
31Katrina and Health Care Texas So far
- Evacuees (except the childless adults) can get
their 5 months of Medicaid coverage any time
between September 1, 2005 and June 30, 2006, as
long as they apply by January 31, 2006. - There are no asset limits, and no premiums or
co-payments required. - Benefits include what Texas Medicaid and CHIP now
cover including mental health services. - HHSC says the pool will pay for care to all
evacuees (if not covered by Medicaid) up to 200
FPL, for services delivered between 8/24/05 and
1/31/06. - HHSC reported only 9,028 waiver enrollees as of
10/21?? but that number should increase. - After 5 months, these folks can apply for regular
Texas Medicaid (most working parents will not
qualify). HHSC projects about 135,000 new
Medicaid clients in FY 2006 may result.
32Congress passes Medicaid Cuts, Changes in FY 2006
Budget Reconciliation
- Cuts do NOT reduce deficit, as tax cuts that are
part of the Budget Reconciliation package
EXCEED the spending cuts - Senate and House had VERY different budget cut
bills House dominated final bill on HHS issues. - Cut Medicaid by 4.7 billion over 5 years (26.4
billion over 10 years) - Mandatory Provisions
- Requirement to verify citizenship Beginning July
1, 2006, all citizens applying for Medicaid have
to submit passports or naturalization papers or
birth certificates and other proof of identity to
prove that they are citizens. - Changes in the treatment of asset transfers by
individuals needing Medicaid coverage for
long-term care services. - Optional provisions
- New state authority to impose co-payments and
premiums - prescription drugs and non-emergency use of the
emergency room for all groups, all incomes - allows states to implement co-payments up to 10
of the cost of the service to clients with
incomes 100-150 above 150 FPL can be charged
up to 20 of the cost of the service. Children,
pregnant women, BCCTP exempt.
33Congress passes Medicaid Cuts, Changes in FY 2006
Budget Reconciliation
- New state authority to provide scaled back
benefit packages for some groups of beneficiaries - Children lt 133 FPL must get the full EPSDT
benefits, tho some worry about wrap-around
approach - states may amend their state Medicaid plans to
establish new benefit packages modeled on
commercial health insurance coverage for
higher-income, non-disabled, non-elderly adults
(probably no one in current Texas program) - New state authority to establish Health
Opportunity Accounts (HOAs??!) for some
beneficiaries - up to 10 states
- Clients can be responsible for up to 10 of
deductible - COSTS the bill 261 million/10 years
34Congress passes Medicaid Cuts, Changes in FY 2006
Budget Reconciliation
- CBO
- 80 percent of the budget cuts that result from
Medicaid co-payment increases would come from
enrollees who do not receive the health care they
need because they can't afford the co-payments--
not from the collection of increased co-payments - 65,000 individuals would lose Medicaid coverage
entirely because they will be unable to afford
new premiums. Children will account for 60
percent of the individuals who are unable to pay
their premiums and are therefore denied Medicaid
coverage. - Around 15 percent of new Medicaid nursing home
coverage recipients each year would ultimately
face delays of up to one year in obtaining
coverage as a result of the new rules.
35Ways to Be Informed and Involved
- Go to www.cppp.org and subscribe to CPPPs e-mail
publication, the Policy Page. - Go to www.texaschip.org to get on Texas CHIP
Coalition listserve (be sure to read the
minutes!) - for National information about Congress, the
President, Medicaid and CHIP www.familiesusa.org
- for more technical and detailed information about
Congress, the President, Medicaid CHIP, and the
federal budget taxes www.cbpp.org