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Vermont's Global Commitment Waiver: Implications for the Medicaid Program

This issue brief provides some general background on Vermont's Medicaid program and the Global Commitment waiver; answers a series of key questions about how it is designed to work; and discusses the potential implications for the state of Vermont, beneficiaries, and the Medicaid program.

In the fall of 2005, Vermont secured approval for a Section 1115 Medicaid waiver known as the "Global Commitment waiver" that allows the state to fundamentally restructure its Medicaid program. The waiver imposes a cap on the amount of federal Medicaid funding available to Vermont to provide acute care services to its Medicaid population. In combination with a second, long-term care waiver, the Global Commitment waiver makes Vermont the only state in the nation facing a fixed-dollar limit on the amount of federal funding available for its Medicaid program. In exchange for taking on the risk of operating under a capped funding arrangement, the waiver allows Vermont to use federal Medicaid funds to refinance a broad array of its own non-Medicaid health programs, creating a fiscal windfall for the state. It also gives Vermont new flexibility to reduce benefits, increase cost sharing and cap enrollment for many Medicaid beneficiaries.

Issue Brief Icon Issue Brief (.pdf)



Information provided by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
Publication Number: 7493
Publish Date: 2006-05-02

 

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