One Year into Duals Demo Enrollment: Early Expectations Meet Reality

July 2014 marks a year since the first beneficiaries dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid began receiving services through one of the new financial alignment demonstrations.  The demonstrations seek to maintain or decrease health care costs while maintaining or improving health outcomes for this vulnerable population of seniors and non-elderly people with significant disabilities.   In 2011, CMS anticipated that the three year demonstrations would begin in 2012, and CMS has estimated that the demonstrations will serve no more than 2 million beneficiaries.  To date, CMS has approved 13 demonstrations in which nearly 1.5 million beneficiaries in 12 states are eligible to enroll.  As of June 2014, just over 66,000 beneficiaries were enrolled in a capitated demonstration health plan in California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Virginia (Exhibit 1), with enrollment to follow in other states through early 2015.   At this early stage of implementation, some initial insights about the demonstrations are beginning to emerge:

Enrollment of Dual Eligible Beneficiaries in Demonstrations as a Share of the Number of Beneficiaries Eligible to Enroll in Demonstrations by State, June 2014

Enrollment of Dual Eligible Beneficiaries in Demonstrations as a Share of the Number of Beneficiaries Eligible to Enroll in Demonstrations by State, June 2014

The demonstrations will continue to develop over their three-year terms, during which additional insights will emerge.  For example, it is still too early to determine the sources of program savings, whether the models will be financially viable over the long-term, or the demonstrations’ overall impact on access to and quality of care and health outcomes, all of which will be important elements in evaluating the demonstrations’ overall success.  As additional states move toward implementation, they may be able to learn from earlier states’ implementation experiences.  The Kaiser Family Foundation will continue to track these efforts and is conducting case studies in three early implementation states, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Virginia, to gather and disseminate additional early lessons from the demonstrations in the initial stages of implementation.

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