Title: Overview of Medicare, Medicaid and State Children
1Overview of Medicare, Medicaid and State
Childrens Health Insurance Program
forCitizens Health Care Working Group
- William J. Scanlon
- Health Policy RD
- National Health Policy Forum
2Overview of Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP
- Eligibility
- Services Covered
- Financing
3Eligibility
Categories Income
Medicare -Aged -Disabled -ESRD Patients All
Medicaid -Children -Parents -Aged -Disabled Low Income--varies by state subject to federal limits
SCHIP -Children Low Income--varies by state subject to federal limits
4Services
Acute Care Chronic Care Long-term Care
Medical, nursing and pharmaceutical services for an immediate need Medical, nursing and pharmaceutical services for an ongoing need Supportive services to compensate for a disability
5Services
Acute Care Chronic Care Long-term Care
Medicare X X
Medicaid X X X
SCHIP X X
6Financing
- Medicare
- Open Ended Entitlement
- Federal
- Payroll Taxes
- General Revenues
- Beneficiary Premiums
- Medicaid
- Open Ended Entitlement
- Federal and State General Revenues
- SCHIP
- Fixed Federal Appropriation
- Federal and State General Revenues
- Beneficiary Premiums
7Medicare
- 41 million beneficiaries
- 301 billion in 2004
- 11.7 of Federal Budget
- 2.6 of GDP (2003)
8Medicare Program Structure
- Original or Traditional Medicare (also known
as Fee-for-Service Medicare) - Medicare AdvantagePrivate plan options
- Drug Benefit
Part C
Part D
9Medicare Benefits
- Medicare Covers Acute and Chronic Care
- Part A
- Inpatient hospital
- Post-hospital skilled nursing facility (SNF)
services - Home health
- Hospice-care
- Part B
- Physician and laboratory services
- Outpatient hospital
- Therapy
- Durable medical equipment and supplies
- Home health (not-covered under Part A)
- Part D
- Drugs
10Medicare Cost-Sharing
- Hospital Care
- Days 1-60Deductible (912 in 2005)
- Days 61-90Per day coinsurance (228 in 2005)
- Days 91-150Per day coinsurance (456 in 2005)
for 60 lifetime reserve days - SNF
- Days 21-100Per day coinsurance (114 in 2005)
11Medicare Cost SharingContinued
- Part B
- Deductible 110 in 2005
- Coinsurance 20 of Medicare approved amount
- Exceptions
- Mental health 50 co-insurance
- Hospital outpatientFixed amounts
- Home healthnone
- Over-billing limit 15 above Medicare approved
amount on unassigned claims
12Medicare Cost SharingContinued
- Beneficiary cost sharing on Medicare
- covered services can be substantial
- Beneficiaries in 1998 paying more than
-
Number of Beneficiaries Percent
2,000 3.4 million 11.5
5,000 736 thousand 2.5
10,000 167 thousand 0.6
13Medicare Supplementary Coverage
- Vast majority of beneficiaries in traditional
Medicare have supplementary coverage
Supplementary Coverage in 2000
14Medicare AdvantagePart C
- Offers choice to join private plan
- Plan types include HMOs, PPOs, FFS, MSAs
- Plans paid monthly per enrollee fee regardless of
services used - Plan savings returned in extra benefits
15Medicare AdvantagePart C
- Plan and beneficiary participation have varied
over time
Plans
Enrollees (millions)
16Medicare AdvantagePart C
- Medicare Modernization Act changed Part C
- Increased payments to plans
- Provided for financial competition among plans
and share of savings to Medicare - Created regional PPOs to expand areas served
17Medicare AdvantagePart C
PPO Regions for 2006
18Medicare Drug Benefit--Part D
- Begins January 1, 2006
- Separate enrollment and premium
- Monthly premium expected to average 37
nationally - Benefit provided by competing private stand-alone
drug plans or Medicare Advantage plans - Benefit
- 250 deductible
- Coinsurance
- 25 from 250 to 2,250
- 100 from 2,250 to 5,100
- 5 on spending over 5,100
- Subsidies for premium and cost sharing for low
income persons
19Medicaid and SCHIP
- Medicaid
- over 52 million beneficiaries
- 309 billion in 2004
- Federal share
- 176 billion or .8 of federal budget
- State share
- 133 billion or 22 of state budgets
- 2003
- SCHIP
- 6 million beneficiaries
- 6.1 billion in 2004
- 75 Federal
- 25 State
20Medicaid
- Program Roles
- Primary health insurancemostly families
- Medicare supplementdual eligible aged and
disabled beneficiaries - Long-term care financer beneficiaries with
disabilities
21Medicaid
22Medicaid
- Programs are state designed and administered
subject to federal requirements - Result is 56 distinct Medicaid programs
23MedicaidMandatory and Optional
EligibilitySelected Categories
- Mandatory
- Children
- 6-18 years up to 100 FPL
- 0-5 years up to 133 FPL
- Foster care
- Pregnant women
- Up to 133 FPL
- SSI cash recipients
- Optional
- Children and Pregnant women
- Up to 185 FPL
- Elderly and Disabled
- Up to 100FPL
- Medically Needy
24Medicaid Mandatory Medicare Supplementary
Insurance
- Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries (QMBs)
- Up to 100 FPLPart B Premium and cost sharing
- Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiaries
(SLMBs) - 100-120 FPL---Part B Premium
- Qualifying Individuals (QIs)
- 120-135 FPLPortion of Part B Premium
- Qualified Disabled Working Individuals (QDWIs)
- Up to 200 FPL---Part A Premium
25MedicaidMandatory and Optional ServicesSelected
Types
- Mandatory
- Physician
- Hospital inpatient and outpatient
- Nursing Facility for persons 21 and over
- Lab and X-ray
- EPSDT for persons less than 21
- Optional
- Prescription Drugs
- Dental services
- ICF/MRs
- Home and community-based services
26Medicaid Waivers
- Program Waivers
- Mandatory managed care enrollment (1915(b))
- Section 1115 Demonstrations
- Statewide experimentation with financing
mechanisms, managed care, coverage expansions - HIFAHealth Insurance Flexibility and
Accountabilitytradeoff of more limited benefit
packages and cost sharing for expanded coverage
27SCHIP
- Federal-State Partnership very different
- Capped appropriationnot an entitlement
- 39 billion for 10 years (reauthorization 2007)
- State Flexibility
- States can cap/close enrollment
- 7 states froze enrollment at least temporarily
between 2001 and 2004 - 3 had freezes in effect at end of 2004
-
28SCHIPState Flexibility (Continued)
- Benefits
- Medicaid Expansion
- Distinct program with benefits similar to
- BC/BS plan state employees plan largest
Medicaid HMO or actuarially equivalent - Combination
- Cost sharing
- Very limited for children in families 150FPL
- For others, premiums and co-payments allowed if
- 5 of income
29Changes in Health Insurance Coverage for
Low-Income Children and Adults,
2000-2003Percentage Point Changes
Children
Adults
Change in Population
Change in Uninsured
Note Low-income is defined as less than lt200 of
poverty (29,360 for a family of three) SOURCE
Urban Institute for the Kaiser Commission on
Medicaid and the Uninsured, 2004
30Medicaid as LTC Financer
- Pays close to half of all LTC expenditures
- Nursing homes
- 46 percent of revenues
- 1 million or 2/3 of residents partially or fully
financed - Home and community services
- 48 percent of expenditures
- 850 thousand recipients
31Medicare and Medicaid as a Share of GDP
32For more informationUnderstanding Medicare and
Medicaid Fundamentals and Issues for the New
Congress Briefing Book January 26,
2005www.nhpf.org