STATES SUSTAIN AND EXPAND COVERAGE FOR
LOW-INCOME CHILDREN AND FAMILIES DESPITE RECESSION, BUT GAINS ARE THREATENED BY
IMPENDING END OF FEDERAL ASSISTANCE
New 50-State Survey Illustrates Key Role
of CHIP Reauthorization and
the Federal Stimulus Law in Safeguarding
Coverage
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Despite the
deep recession, most states have managed to safeguard and, in some cases, expand
health coverage for children and parents in their Medicaid and Children's
Health Insurance Programs in 2009, according to a new survey from the Kaiser
Family Foundation's Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. But the gains, which could serve as a base for
covering millions more people under health reform, are threatened by the
impending end of key federal assistance at the end of 2010 and before health
reform coverage would begin.
The annual 50-state survey of
eligibility rules, enrollment and renewal procedures and cost-sharing practices
in Medicaid and CHIP for children and parents found that, overall, most states in
2009 continued to expand and simplify their Medicaid and CHIP programs, the
main vehicles for providing coverage to low-income children and families, even
as they faced the bleakest economic picture in years and severe budget
pressures. However, budget shortfalls
did result in cutbacks in some states.
"The renewal of CHIP and the fiscal
relief and eligibility and enrollment protections for Medicaid in the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) proved critical to enable states to
continue their commitment to providing coverage to millions of low-income families,"
said Diane Rowland, Executive Vice President of the Foundation and Executive Director
of the KCMU. "However, even with signs
of economic recovery, state revenues are still mired in a severe slump and, faced
with the end of enhanced federal money after 2010, fiscal shortfalls are likely
to cause states to consider significant cuts to Medicaid and CHIP."
Despite National Gains, Prominent Disparities Remain
While the survey reveals
significant overall progress nationally in expanding public coverage or making
it easier to access, wide variations in coverage persist. Among the survey findings:
- Currently, 47 states cover children in families
with an annual income at or higher than 200 percent of the federal poverty
level ($36,620 for a family of three), with half (24 states) covering children
in families with incomes at or greater than 250 percent of poverty
($45,775 for a family of three).
- Parent eligibility levels continue to lag far
behind, and the disparity between children and parents is growing. Currently, the median income eligibility
limit for children is 235 percent of the federal poverty level ($43,029
for a family of three) compared to the median for a working parent at 64
percent of the federal poverty level ($11,718 for a family of three).
- More than half of states (26, shown below)
bolstered coverage for low income children, parents and pregnant women,
either by expanding eligibility, simplifying enrollment procedures or
reducing financial barriers. Children were the chief beneficiaries of
expansions in 2009, with 19 of those 26 states improving access to
coverage for children by increasing eligibility, simplifying procedures
and eliminating premiums. These 26
states included Alabama, Alaska, California,
Connecticut, Florida,
Idaho, Iowa,
Indiana, Kansas,
Louisiana, Maryland,
Montana, North
Dakota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New Jersey,
New York, Ohio,
Oregon, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, South
Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington
and West Virginia.
- Fifteen states, shown below, scaled back coverage
in their CHIP programs during 2009.
Although no state reduced eligibility for children, two states (California and Tennessee) froze CHIP enrollment for
some period of time in 2009 and one state reduced eligibility for
parents. Other actions included
increases in waiting periods, retractions in eligibility simplifications,
and relatively modest increases in CHIP premiums. Even after recent increases, the median CHIP premium payment for two children in a family
with income at 200 percent of poverty remains modest at $480 annually, representing
1.3 percent of family income. These
15 states included Arizona, California, Montana,
Tennessee, Florida,
Maine, Maryland,
Missouri, North
Carolina, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania,
Utah, Washington
and Wisconsin.
Arizona also eliminated parent coverage,
and Montana
retracted its simplified income verification procedures in CHIP.
Gains Could Be Eroded By The Recession, Weakening the
Coverage Base for Health Reform
States' commitment to providing
Medicaid and CHIP coverage to low-income children and families will continue to
be tested in 2010 as dismal state budget circumstances persist. Recent
forecasts indicate states will face even bigger shortfalls in the upcoming
fiscal year. At the same time, the federal assistance that states have relied
on under ARRA is scheduled to expire at the end of the 2010 calendar year, and
along with it the requirement that states maintain eligibility levels and
refrain from imposing enrollment barriers. That raises the prospect of
substantial state cuts in Medicaid and CHIP that could reverse recent
expansions and undermine the base of coverage for low-income families upon
which broader health reform efforts seek to build.
The leading reform bills in
Congress build on Medicaid to expand health coverage to millions of people, but
differ in the scope of the expansion they envision, the level of federal
support they would provide to states, and in how they treat coverage for children.
These survey findings provide a baseline
against which future progress can be measured.
Further, as policymakers attempt to craft final legislation, they can
draw on what states have learned about the importance of simplifying enrollment
and renewal procedures, covering parents, and limiting cost sharing. The simple and coordinated procedures that
have helped assure that eligible children and parents secure and retain
coverage, and that have enabled families to transition smoothly between
programs when family circumstances change, will be essential in a new health
insurance system.
Today's report, A Foundation for Health Reform:
Findings of a 50-State Survey of Eligibility Rules, Enrollment and Renewal
Procedures, and Cost-Sharing Practices in Medicaid and CHIP for Children and
Parents During 2009, and related materials, including a new issue paper on key issues to consider in health
reform regarding coverage of low-income children, are available online at http://www.kff.org/medicaid/kcmu120809pkg.cfm. In addition, an audio press
briefing on the release will be available after 6 p.m. ET today.
# # #
The Kaiser Family Foundation is a non-profit private
operating foundation, based in Menlo
Park, California,
dedicated to producing and communicating the best possible information and
analysis on health issues.
The Kaiser Commission on
Medicaid and the Uninsured provides information and analysis on health care
coverage and access for the low-income population, with a special focus on
Medicaid's role and coverage of the uninsured. Begun in 1991 and based in the
Kaiser Family Foundation's Washington,
D.C. office, the Commission is
the largest operating program of the Foundation. The Commission's work is
conducted by Foundation staff under the guidance of a bipartisan group of
national leaders and experts in health care and public policy.