Express Lane Eligibility Efforts: Lessons Learned from Early State Cross-Program Enrollment Initiatives
The Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA)
provides states new options to reach and enroll eligible but uninsured
low-income children into Medicaid and CHIP. The law's Express Lane Eligibility
(ELE) provisions enable state Medicaid and CHIP agencies to identify, enroll and
recertify children by relying on eligibility findings from other programs, such
as Head Start or Food Stamps, rather than having to re-analyze eligibility under
their own rules. Further, CHIPRA authorizes greater use of electronic means to
demonstrate eligibility.
This brief is the first in a new series called
Putting Children on the Express Lane to Health Insurance that will provide
information on key issues related to implementing Express Lane Eligibility. It
discusses lessons states can draw on from the experience of earlier
cross-program enrollment efforts as they consider the ELE option and design ELE
programs. Those efforts demonstrate the importance of creating a one-step
process for families, utilizing state-initiated and ex parte methods that place
minimal burdens on families to collect information, utilizing and expanding the
role of technology to share information across programs and establishing
cross-agency support.
Issue Brief (.pdf)