KFF designs, conducts and analyzes original public opinion and survey research on Americans’ attitudes, knowledge, and experiences with the health care system to help amplify the public’s voice in major national debates.
On January 30, 2020, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released guidance inviting states to apply for new Section 1115 demonstrations known as the “Healthy Adult Opportunity” (HAO). These demonstrations would permit states “extensive flexibility” to use Medicaid funds to cover Affordable Care Act (ACA) expansion adults and other nonelderly adults covered at state option who do not qualify on the basis of disability, without being bound by many federal standards related to Medicaid eligibility, benefits, delivery systems, and program oversight. In exchange, states would agree to a limit on federal financing in the form of a per capita or aggregate cap. States that opt for the aggregate cap and meet performance standards could access a portion of federal savings if actual spending is under the cap.
HAO demonstrations differ from other Medicaid demonstrations already granted by this Administration in several ways, including the scope of flexibility offered to states and the capped federal funding. This issue brief explains the key elements of the HAO guidance (Figure 1) and considers the implications of the new demonstrations.
Figure 1: Key components of new Healthy Adult Opportunity Guidance
Background
Today, states operate their Medicaid programs within federal minimum standards and a wide range of state options in exchange for federal matching funds that are available with no limit. The matching structure provides states with resources that automatically adjust for demographic and economic shifts, health care costs, public health emergencies, natural disasters and changing state priorities. In exchange for the federal funds, states must meet federal standards that reflect the program’s role covering a low-income population with limited resources and often complex health needs. Over time, states have transformed and updated their Medicaid programs to adopt new service delivery models, payment strategies, and quality initiatives.
Capped financing can present challenges for health programs. Unlike Medicaid in the states, the U.S. territories operate Medicaid under a federal cap, which has been set too low to meet enrollees’ needs and inflexible when responses to emerging health issues and natural disasters are required. Another capped entitlement, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), has been successful mainly because most states administer CHIP in conjunction with Medicaid (which is not capped), and the federal funding caps for CHIP have been set at levels that have not required states to make substantial program cuts. However, requirements to reauthorize federal CHIP funding and past failure of Congress to act timely resulted in state budget issues and confusion for some enrollees.
Use of block grants in Medicaid has been debated before, dating back to the Reagan administration and most recently as part of the 2017 ACA repeal and replace debate. Under these legislative proposals, which would have applied to all states, federal funding for Medicaid could have been reduced by more than one-third over the next two decades below the projected baseline. Analysis of previous block grant proposals finds that reductions in funding and federal caps shift risk to states; coupled with additional state flexibility, enrollees could face fewer guaranteed benefits and less coverage compared to current law. Congress also considered the 2017 Graham-Cassidy legislation that would have ended federal funding for the ACA, partially replaced that funding with a block grant (for the Medicaid expansion and other Medicaid populations), and redistributed funds across states. A similar proposal was included in the President’s FY 2020 budget proposal. Congress failed to enact these proposals, and polling at the time showed that the public opposed block grants.
The Trump administration has used Section 1115 authority to implement substantial policy changes to the Medicaid program. Previous administrations also have used Section 1115 authority to advance policy priorities, but the Trump administration marked a new direction for Medicaid demonstrations beginning with the release of revised demonstration approval criteria in November 2017 that no longer included expanding coverage among the stated objectives. Section 1115 demonstrations issued under the Trump administration to date have included state programs to condition Medicaid eligibility on fulfillment of work and reporting requirements; use of premiums, copayments, and benefit restrictions not otherwise allowed under federal law; and behavioral health programs to use Medicaid funds for inpatient psychiatric hospital payments, among others. Most of these demonstrations were authorized through Section 1115 (a) (1) authority, which allows the HHS Secretary to waive state compliance with certain provisions in Section 1902 of the statute. In a few instances, the Administration has used Section 1115 (a) (2) authority, which allows the Secretary to approve federal matching funds for state spending on costs not otherwise matchable (CNOM). For example, more than half of all states have demonstrations to pay for services in “institutions for mental disease” (IMDs) for adults age 21-64, an expense not otherwise allowable under the law. The HAO demonstrations also will use Section 1115 (a) (2) expenditure authority, which CMS maintains enables the Secretary to permit states to “not apply” federal Medicaid requirements to expenditures for individuals covered under the HAO demonstrations. While previous administrations have relied on Section 1115 (a) (2) for coverage expansions, they did so before there was legal authority under the ACA to cover those populations. In using Section 1115 (a) (2), this Administration is inviting states to choose from a “menu” of provisions included in other approved demonstrations to date, and it is offering states the opportunity to modify or eliminate some program rules not previously granted.
Key Provisions of HAO Demonstrations
Financing
The HAO demonstrations will be subject to an annual federal spending cap. States will choose whether to use an aggregate cap or a per capita cap. States opting for an aggregate cap will be subject to that cap without regard to changes in Medicaid enrollment; the cap for states opting for a per capita cap is calculated based on the number of enrollees, times the maximum allowable spending per person. In both cases, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will establish a base amount for the cap using recent spending data and will trend that amount forward. The trend factor will be the lesser of the prior five year state average Medicaid spending growth or medical inflation (CPI-M) for the per capita cap, or CPI-M +.5% for the aggregate cap. For states electing the per capita cap, funding would reflect the trend plus enrollment growth. The guidance also says that CMS will adjust the base amount or subsequent annual caps to account for state flexibilities that could significantly affect enrollment to ensure that states do not achieve savings from disenrolling individuals. States will continue to submit claims reflecting actual expenditures to draw down federal matching funds. States that expand coverage to 138% of the federal poverty level (FPL) can receive enhanced matching funds for ACA expansion adults.
The HAO spending caps differ from current methods used to determine budget neutrality for demonstrations. By long-standing policy, Section 1115 demonstrations are required to be budget neutral to the federal government (i.e., the federal government cannot spend more than it would have spent in the absence of the demonstration). Budget neutrality is calculated by establishing a “without waiver” baseline of expected costs and then comparing that baseline to expected spending under the demonstration. These determinations are typically calculated over the entire term of the demonstration (usually five years) and also typically calculated on a per member per month basis. However, budget neutrality can also be calculated using an aggregate cap. In the past, capped demonstrations have been approved in Rhode Island, Vermont, and Virginia (for a limited population), but they are no longer in place in these states. Under the HAO, caps will be enforced annually (not over the term of the demonstration).
In exchange for taking on greater risk, states choosing an aggregate cap can obtain 25 to 50% of federal savings if spending is below the cap and performance benchmarks are met. Shared savings can be used for existing state-funded health programs or new health-related initiatives targeted to demonstration or other Medicaid enrollees or to offset expenditures that exceed the cap for up to three years. This policy seems to stand in contrast with earlier guidance that would not allow federal funds for designated state health programs (DSHP). Shared savings are available to states on a matched basis at their regular matching rate. States that do not spend at least 80% of their cap annually (combined federal and state spending) will have their cap reduced in subsequent years. States that access shared savings must spend those funds within three years after the demonstration period. States extending coverage to new populations under HAO demonstrations must first implement through a per capita cap model before switching to an aggregate cap model to be eligible for shared savings.
States would be able to propose adjustments to an approved cap to account for changes in projected expenditures or enrollment due to unforeseen circumstances outside the state’s control such as a public health crisis or major economic event. For populations newly covered under an HAO demonstration, CMS will estimate expenditures based on national averages and state specific factors but will re-base the estimate if actual expenditures exceed a specified margin above or below the base. Such adjustments, along with opportunities for shared savings, mitigate the risks for states. Analyses of historic per enrollee growth showed that 47 states would have experienced declines in spending if per enrollee spending for adults had been limited to CPI-M for 2001-2011, though growth in per enrollee health care spending in Medicaid and more broadly has slowed since then. Certain expenditures will be excluded from the HAO caps including disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments, administrative expenditures, expenditures for public health emergencies, expenditures for Indian Health Services (IHS) matched at 100%, and a portion of supplemental payments that could be attributable to the population included in the demonstration.
Eligibility
States could include in HAO demonstrations ACA expansion adults and other adults under age 65 that do not qualify on the basis of disability. These other adult groups include low-income parents and pregnant women covered at state option and other populations currently covered under Section 1115 demonstration authority. All children, mandatory pregnant women (those with incomes up to 138% FPL), mandatory low-income parents (those up to the state’s 1996 cash assistance levels), and adults eligible based on a disability or long-term care need are excluded from the new demonstrations. Still, some people included in HAO demonstrations may have functional or other disabilities, as a large share of Medicaid adults have such disabilities even though they do not qualify on the basis of a disability. The guidance also notes that CMS may consider state requests to include other adult populations who are not covered under the state plan, which may open these demonstrations up to additional adult populations. States could use HAO demonstrations to extend coverage to groups not already covered. States also could terminate current state plan authority for optional groups and move that coverage to an HAO demonstration with additional restrictions.
States could limit eligibility for certain adults under HAO demonstrations. States could set an income limit for expansion adults below 138% FPL and apply an asset test to limit eligibility for any demonstration enrollees. However, states can only receive enhanced matching funds for ACA expansion adults if they cover the full expansion population (all adults with incomes up to 138% FPL) without an asset test. Under the ACA, asset tests are not allowed for low-income parents, pregnant women, and expansion adults. States also can use HAO demonstrations to cover a subset of ACA expansion adults (at the regular matching rate), using other (non-financial) criteria, such as establishing geographic limits or restricting coverage to people with specific illnesses, such as behavioral health diagnoses.
Under the HAO demonstrations, states could limit Medicaid eligibility in other ways not allowed by current law. States could impose additional eligibility requirements, such as work requirements or other criteria that individuals must meet to gain coverage. States also could eliminate 3-month retroactive eligibility and delay the effective coverage date beyond the eligibility determination. For example, states could require that coverage does not begin until an individual enrolls in a health plan, which could involve paying the first month’s premium. States also could require premiums for enrollees at any income level and at any amount, subject only to a cap of 5% of income, and suspend coverage for those who fail to pay after a grace period (other than tribal members, those with substance use disorders, and those with HIV). States could also make changes to current rules around enrollment and renewal processes. For example, states could conduct the initial eligibility renewal sooner than the current 12-month requirement (to align with the Marketplace) and eliminate the ability for hospitals to determine individuals “presumptively” eligible – changes that could reduce enrollment. However, states also could apply 12-month continuous eligibility to demonstration enrollees which could reduce enrollment churn.
Benefits and Cost-Sharing
The HAO demonstrations would allow states to limit covered benefits compared to current law. States would not have to provide the full Medicaid alternative (formerly known as benchmark) benefit package to demonstration enrollees. For example, states could eliminate non-emergency medical transportation and Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment Services (EPDST) for 19 and 20 year olds. Instead, states only need to cover the 10 categories of essential health benefits (EHB) available in Marketplace plans and would have flexibility beyond current law to determine the appropriate amount, duration, and scope of covered services. States could receive enhanced ACA matching funds for expansion adults without providing the full benchmark benefit package as required by current law. States also could seek authority to cover additional services that would improve health outcomes and “address certain health determinants to promote independence.”
States could establish closed prescription drug formularies, a change from current Medicaid rules that generally require states to include all FDA-approved drugs from manufacturers with Medicaid rebate agreements. While the guidance provides that states can use formularies, it stipulates that manufacturers are still obliged to pay rebates under the Medicaid drug rebate program. In addition to EHB requirements, which require coverage of the greater of at least one drug in each drug category and class (with an exceptions process) or the same number of drugs in each category and class as the base benchmark plan used to define EHB, prescription drug formularies under the demonstrations would have to cover substantially all mental health and antiretroviral drugs and all FDA approved drugs with rebate agreements to treat opioid use disorder.
States would have broader authority to impose cost-sharing on enrollees. States could impose cost sharing for any service on any enrollee (other than tribal members, those with substance use disorder, those with HIV, and mental health drugs) above the currently allowed nominal amounts, subject only to the 5% of income out of pocket cap (including premiums and cost-sharing).
Delivery System
States could not follow and/or propose alternative approaches that differ from current federal Medicaid managed care regulations, including access to care and rate certification standards. For example, states would not have to obtain prospective CMS review of actuarially sound capitation rates or CMS approval of health plan contract amendments. States also could adopt alternative provider network adequacy standards and propose alternative approaches to other federal managed care requirements. In addition, while CMS acknowledges that fair hearings are constitutionally required, it will permit states to “not implement” and streamline portions of these processes for all HAO enrollees.
States could deviate from current federal rules with respect to payment and delivery system under HAO demonstrations. For example, states could use value-based payment (VBP) for federally-qualified health centers (FQHCs), which are currently paid under a Prospective Payment System (PPS) that ties payments to the costs of delivering care. VBPs to health centers may limit payment for only certain services, lower their payment, or make payment contingent on meeting certain outcomes. Elimination of hospital presumptive eligibility could also lower payment to hospitals. States are encouraged to pursue delivery system changes under the demonstrations to “promote competition” and incorporate models currently being tested by the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMMI). States also could limit enrollees’ free choice of fee-for-service provider based on state-established standards for reimbursement, quality and utilization.
Oversight and Evaluation
Once a 5-year demonstration is approved, states can make “administrative and programmatic changes” without prior CMS approval, unless the change “has the potential to substantially impact enrollment.” For example, states could change premium and cost sharing amounts or EHB benchmark plans or eliminate optional benefits during the course of the demonstration without submitting a demonstration amendment to CMS. States must report quarterly on 13 performance metrics in the areas of enrollment, retention, access to care, and financial management, and CMS will use rapid cycle evaluation for mid-course corrective action if state cannot correct problems related to enrollee access to coverage or care. States will also be subject to the evaluation requirements standard for all Section 1115 demonstrations.
CMS maintains that these new demonstrations will advance program objectives. Specifically, CMS states that the demonstrations will advance program objectives by “furnishing medical assistance in a manner that promotes the sustainability of government health care spending” and will require states to evaluate their demonstrations to determine whether the additional flexibilities “enable states to more efficiently administer their Medicaid programs” as well as the demonstration’s impact on enrollees. As recent litigation on work requirements shows, the stated goals of the demonstrations have implications for their legality. Those lawsuits have been decided based on the finding that the primary objective of the Medicaid program is to provide affordable coverage to low-income people, which is not highlighted as a program objective for the HAOs.
What to Watch
The HAO guidance, in giving states significantly greater leeway in operating Medicaid programs within a cap on federal spending, is consistent with the Trump administration’s previous support for block grants in the President’s budget proposals and its position in the debate over repealing and replacing the ACA. Unlike past proposed legislative changes, demonstrations under this new guidance would not apply to all states. While states opting for HAO demonstrations would be given greater flexibility compared to current law, they would also face fiscal risks in accepting capped federal funding. The breadth of the new flexibility could also result in limits on coverage and access to care for current enrollees and potentially limit the reach of the ACA Medicaid expansion through the HAO demonstrations, compared to coverage of new enrollees under current law.
Overall, the HAO demonstrations could cover nearly 30 million adults if adopted in all states. This total includes approximately 13 million adults newly covered through the ACA Medicaid expansion, 10 million adults currently covered through other state options (using the estimate that 16.1% of Medicaid enrollees are adults covered at state option without accounting for the ACA expansion), and nearly five million uninsured low-income adults in non-expansion states who could be eligible for Medicaid if the state adopted the expansion.
The HAO guidance would make significant changes to the Medicaid program in the absence of federal legislation, which will likely subject it to legal challenges. Under the HAO, states could access substantial flexibility to provide Medicaid coverage, with various eligibility and benefit restrictions, to many adults in exchange for taking on the risk of capped financing. Oklahoma plans to develop an HAO demonstration proposal that could access Medicaid expansion funding, amid efforts to put the Medicaid expansion question to voters on the ballot in November 2020. While a number of states pursued work requirements promoted under other Section 1115 demonstration guidance, those efforts have been challenged in the courts. The debate has demonstrated the tension and limits on how far an administration can go in implementing significant policy changes to Medicaid through demonstration authority. The HAO guidance is likely to set up a similar tension. Looking ahead, the following questions will be important to follow:
Which states will seek HAO demonstration authority?
What populations will states seek to cover in such demonstrations? To what extent will states move current coverage for adults to HAO demonstrations or extend coverage to new groups, such as low-income adults in states that have not previously expanded Medicaid under the ACA? How will the eligibility criteria and benefits differ from what would be provided under federal law?
What share of HAO enrollees will qualify for the 90% ACA expansion enhanced federal matching rate?
What will the demonstrations mean for federal spending compared to current law? Will states achieve savings, how will the caps be determined in practice and will those caps be set at levels that are binding and require program cuts?
What legal challenges will these demonstrations face and will those challenges stall implementation?
Jennifer Kates, Senior Vice President and Director of KFF’s Global Health & HIV Policy program, testified before the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Foreign Affairs on February 5, 2020, as part of a hearing on Unique Challenges Women Face in Global Health. Her testimony describes the role of the U.S. government in women’s global health, including U.S. programs on global maternal and child health/nutrition, family planning and reproductive health, and HIV (PEPFAR), and highlights challenges and opportunities to strengthen these efforts.
Medicaid continues to be the primary payer for long-term services and supports (LTSS), with these services typically unavailable or unaffordable through Medicare or private insurance. State Medicaid programs must cover LTSS in nursing homes, while most home and community-based services (HCBS) are optional, which results in considerable differences among states in HCBS eligibility, scope of benefits, and delivery systems. This issue brief illustrates current variation and trends in Medicaid HCBS state policy choices, using the latest data (FY 2018) from the Kaiser Family Foundation’s 18th annual 50-state survey. A related brief presents state-level HCBS enrollment and spending data. Key findings include:
State HCBS programs reflect states’ substantial flexibility in choosing among optional authorities.
States have flexibility to target HCBS to certain populations. All states serve people with intellectual or developmental disabilities (I/DD), seniors, and adults with physical disabilities through HCBS waivers, while fewer states offer waivers for people with traumatic brain or spinal cord injuries (TBI/SCI), children who are medically fragile, people with mental illness, and those with HIV/AIDS. People with mental illness and those with I/DD are the populations most commonly served under Section 1915 (i) programs, which provide HCBS to people with functional needs below an institutional level of care.
States generally use the same income and functional eligibility criteria for HCBS waivers and institutional care, placing access to HCBS on equal footing with nursing homes. Over three-quarters of states set HCBS waiver income limits at the federal maximum, and a notable minority of HCBS waivers do not include an asset limit.
Medicaid HCBS benefit packages vary, reflecting the optional nature of most HCBS. Two-thirds of states offer the personal care state plan option, while fewer elect other optional state plan authorities. All states offer at least one HCBS waiver, with home-based services and equipment/technology/modifications as the most commonly offered waiver benefits across states and target populations. Waivers targeting seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities and people with TBI/SCI are the most likely to offer enrollees the option to self-direct services, while waivers serving people with mental illness are least likely to do so.
Over three-quarters of states report an HCBS waiver waiting list. Waiting list enrollment totals nearly 820,000 people nationally with an average wait time of 39 months. All individuals on waiting lists ultimately may not be eligible for waiver services. Notably, the eight states that do not screen for waiver eligibility before placing an individual on a waiting list comprise 61% of the total waiting list population.
All states monitor HCBS waiver quality, but no standardized measure set is used across programs. Most states measure beneficiary quality of life and/or community integration, while about half use an LTSS rebalancing measure.
Over half of states have capitated managed long-term services and supports (MLTSS) programs.
Most states already have adopted policies to follow the 2016 changes in the federal Medicaid managed care rule. For example, over three-quarters of capitated MLTSS states have network adequacy standards for HCBS providers, with time and distance as the most common.
Value-based payment for HCBS is an emerging area of interest. Over one-quarter of capitated MLTSS states currently use VBP models, and more states are planning to do so.
States are working to implement new policies in response to federal laws and regulations affecting HCBS.
Few states have fully implemented electronic visit verification (EVV) systems to date, with a majority of states reporting challenges in this area. EVV is required for personal care services in January 2020, and home health services in January 2023, though states can seek a one year exemption.
Nearly all states already have or plan to change policy to meet CMS’s home and community-based settings rule. Most changes relate to settings that must be modified to continue to be used for Medicaid-funded HCBS, while 20 states have identified settings that cannot be modified and will require beneficiaries to relocate.
Less than half of states already have or plan to restrict direct care worker hours or make other policy changes in response to the U.S. Department of Labor minimum wage and overtime rules. One-third of states have budgeted funds for worker overtime and/or travel time.
States will face increasing pressure to meet the health and LTSS needs of a growing elderly population in the near future. Understanding the variation in Medicaid HCBS state policies is important for analyzing the implications of this demographic change as well as the implications of a range of policy changes that could fundamentally restructure federal Medicaid financing or the larger U.S. health care system. For example, substantially cutting and capping the federal Medicaid funds available to states through a block grant or per capita cap could put pressure on states to eliminate optional covered populations and services, such as those that authorize and expand the availability of HCBS. While all states could face challenges in this scenario to varying degrees, those with certain characteristics– such as existing restrictive Medicaid policies; demographics like poverty, old age, or poor health status that reflect high needs; high cost health care markets; or low state fiscal capacity – could face greater challenges. On the other hand, moving to a Medicare-for-all system would eliminate existing state variation in favor uniform coverage of HCBS for all Americans. Unlike Medicaid, HCBS would be required and explicitly prioritized over institutional services under current Medicare-for-all proposals. As these policy debates develop, there will be continued focus on Medicaid’s role in providing HCBS for seniors and people with disabilities.
Issue Brief
Introduction
State Medicaid programs must cover long-term services and supports (LTSS) provided in nursing homes, while most home and community-based services (HCBS) are optional.1Joint federal and state Medicaid spending across the main HCBS authorities totaled $92 billion in FY 2018, with most spending and enrollment in optional authorities.2 In addition to choosing which HCBS to offer, states have flexibility to determine a number of policies that shape these benefits in important ways for the seniors and people with disabilities and chronic illnesses who rely on them to live independently in the community.
This issue brief presents the latest (FY 2018) data on key state policy choices from the Kaiser Family Foundation’s 18th annual survey of Medicaid HCBS programs in all 50 states and DC. Our survey encompasses home health, personal care, Community First Choice, and Section 1915 (i) state plan benefits as well as Section 1915 (c) and Section 1115 waivers (Figure 1 and Appendix Table 1). We include findings related to state choices about scope of benefits, self-direction, capitated managed care delivery systems, provider policies and reimbursement rates, financial and functional eligibility criteria, HCBS waiver waiting lists and other utilization controls, and quality measures. We also report on state progress in implementing notable regulations, including the LTSS provisions in the Medicaid managed care rule, the electronic visit verification rule, the home and community-based settings rule, and the U.S. Department of Labor direct care worker minimum wage and overtime rule. Appendix Tables contain detailed state-level data. A related brief presents the latest state-level Medicaid HCBS enrollment and spending data.
Home Health State Plan Benefit Policies
All states offer home health state plan services, the only HCBS that is not provided at state option. At minimum, the home health state plan benefit includes nursing services, home health aide services, and medical supplies, equipment, and appliances. Home health aides typically assist individuals with self-care tasks, such as bathing or eating. While all state Medicaid programs must offer home health state plan services, states have substantial flexibility in designing this benefit. Key state home health policy choices are described below and summarized in Figure 2 and Appendix Table 2.
Nearly all states choose to expand the scope of their home health state plan benefit by including optional therapy services (physical, occupational, and/or speech-language) (Figure 2 and Appendix Table 2). Oklahoma is the only state that does not cover any form of optional therapy services as part of its home health state plan benefit. A minority of states choose to include assistance with household activities, such as preparing meals or housekeeping, within their home health state plan benefit. A dozen states cover other optional services within their home health state plan benefit, such as social work, counseling, nutrition/dietitian services, case management, telehealth (remote monitoring), and emergency support/caregiver respite (no data shown).
Few states allow beneficiaries to self-direct home health state plan services (Figure 2 and Appendix Table 2). Self-direction typically allows beneficiaries to select and dismiss their direct care workers, determine worker schedules, set worker payment rates, and/or allocate their service budgets. The states that offer self-direction for home health state plan services are California, Nebraska,3 and New Jersey. States may be less likely to offer self-direction for home health services compared to personal care services (discussed below) at least in part because home health services may be used by some beneficiaries for shorter periods of time. Nebraska is the only state that allows self-direction for home health services but not for personal care services (Appendix Tables 2 and 3).
Just over half of states apply utilization controls to their home health state plan benefit (Figure 2 and Appendix Table 2). Specifically, 25 states cap the number of home health service hours or visits that a beneficiary can receive, and three states cap the daily amount that can be spent on home health services for an individual. Among states applying utilization controls, all choose either hour/visit caps or spending caps, except Oregon, which applies both types of utilization controls. Thirteen states allow exceptions to their hour/visit limits, while two states (AK and RI) do not.4 Among the three states that offer self-direction for home health services, two (CA and NJ) apply their hour/visit limits to both self-directed and other (e.g., agency-provided) services, while Nebraska does not apply its cost cap to self-directed services. Applying hour or cost caps to self-directed services can have implications for beneficiary access to needed service hours as well as the direct care worker overtime rule (discussed below).
Ten states require a copayment for home health state plan services (Figure 2 and Appendix Table 2).5 Copayment amounts range from $1 to $4 per visit,6 with most states (7 of 10) charging about $3.7 Maine’s copayments are capped at $30 per month, while South Carolina and Virginia note that if more than one home health service is provided on the same day, the individual is only assessed one copay. Kansas’s copayment applies only to individuals enrolled in fee-for-service Medicaid (about 2% of the population) and not to those enrolled in a capitated managed care plan.
Over half of states deliver some or all home health state plan services through capitated managed care (Figure 2).8 A Section 1115 demonstration waiver is the most frequently used Medicaid managed care authority for these services (12 states), while fewer states use a Section 1915 (b) managed care waiver (5 states), the Section 1932 managed care state plan option (4 states), or a combination of Medicaid managed care authorities (5 states) (no data shown).9
The average provider reimbursement rate for home health agency services is $102.85 per visit (Appendix Table 2).10 Agency reimbursement rates account for a range of home health providers, such as registered nurses; home health aides; physical, occupational, and speech-language therapists; and social workers. In the 37 states with direct payment or mandated rates for registered nurses providing home health services, the average rate per visit is $89.89.11 In the 39 states with direct payment or mandated rates for home health aides, the average rate per visit is $46.80.12
Personal Care State Plan Benefit Policies
Thirty-four states offer personal care services as an optional state plan benefit (Appendix Table 3). Delaware discontinued its personal care state plan benefit in FY 2018, and instead now covers those services under its home health state plan benefit.13 Personal care services “may include a range of human assistance. . . [that] enables [individuals] to accomplish tasks that they would normally do for themselves if they did not have a disability.”14 These services typically assist individuals with self-care tasks, such as eating, bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, and maintaining continence, and household activities, such as personal hygiene, light housework, laundry, meal preparation, transportation, grocery shopping, using the telephone, medication management, and money management.15 The scope of personal care services “may be in the form of hands-on assistance (actually performing a personal care task for a person) or cuing so that the person performs the task by him/herself.”16 Key state policy choices about personal care state plan benefits are summarized in Figure3 and Appendix Table 3 and described below.
All states (of 32 responding)17 that elect the personal care state plan option include assistance with self-care activities, and most include homemaker/chore services to assist with household activities. Over half of personal care states cover cueing or monitoring, in addition to hands-on assistance (Figure 3). Fifteen states provide transportation as part of their personal care benefit, and a dozen include tasks delegated by a nurse, such as injections (no data shown). About one-third of states cover other services within their personal care state plan benefit, such as respite, case management, medical escort, life skills training,18 and assistive technology (no data shown).
In addition to a beneficiary’s residence, about three-quarters of states electing the personal care state plan option offer services at an individual’s work site (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 3). Two-thirds of personal care states provide services elsewhere in the community outside of a home or work setting. Providing services at a work site or elsewhere in the community can increase the extent to which beneficiaries are integrated into the community. About one-third of personal care states provide services at other residential settings, such as residential care, foster care, or assisted living facilities; the residence of family or friends; or dormitories for full-time students (no data shown). California allows for services to be provided out-of-state on a limited basis, to enable individuals to go on vacation or attend a funeral.
Over half of personal care states allow individuals to self-direct these services (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 3), almost seven times the number that do so for home health state plan services. As noted above, self-direction typically allows beneficiaries to select and dismiss their direct care workers, determine worker schedules, set worker payment rates, and/or allocate their service budgets.
Over one-third of personal care states allow individuals to choose among both agency and independent providers, while few states allow legally responsible relatives to be paid providers (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 3). Covering more provider types can help to increase access to personal care services, which is especially critical as individuals often rely on these services for basic daily needs. Just under half of personal care states cover only agency providers, and three states (CA, MA and VT) offer only independent providers. The states that allow legally responsible relatives, such as a spouse or parent, to be paid providers are Alaska,19 California, Louisiana,20 Minnesota, and Oregon.
Nearly all personal care states use a standardized assessment tool to determine functional needs for personal care state plan services. The two states that do not base the functional needs assessment on a standardized tool are New Hampshire and Utah. Among states using a standardized assessment tool, 25 describe it as a state-specific or “another” tool,21 while five states report using the Inter-RAI tool (LA, MD, MO, NM and SD).
Just under half of personal care states rely on a state or local government agency to perform the functional needs assessment for personal care state plan services. Two states (CO and WI) rely on health care providers to assess functional needs; one state (NJ) relies on managed care plans; and one state (VT) uses community-based organizations. The remaining dozen states use “another entity,” which could include a combination of state staff and providers, community-based organizations, and/or health plans. Nearly three-quarters of personal care states have an exceptions process if individuals disagree with the assessment results (no data shown).
Over half of personal care states apply utilization controls to these services (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 3), while one state requires a copayment. Among the states with utilization controls, 20 cap the number of hours that an individual can receive, and two states (FL and MO) cap the amount spent on personal care services that an individual can receive. All states with utilization controls choose either hour or cost caps, except Florida, which applies both. Among the 11 states with hourly caps that also allow self-direction, seven (AR, ID, MI, MN, MT, NV, and NJ) apply hourly caps to both self-directed and other (e.g., agency-provided) services, three (DC, MA, and VT) apply hourly caps only to self-directed services, and one (CA) applies hourly caps only to non-self-directed services. Applying hourly caps to self-directed services can have implications for beneficiary access to needed service hours as well as the direct care worker overtime rule (discussed below). Maine is the only state that requires a copayment, of $3 per day (capped at $30/month), for personal care state plan services.
Over one-third of personal care states deliver some or all of these services through capitated managed care.22 States’ choice of Medicaid managed care authority varies, with three states using a Section 1115 demonstration waiver, three states using the Section 1932 managed care state plan option, two states using a Section 1915 (b) managed care waiver, one state using Section 1915 (a) managed care authority, and three states using a combination of managed care authorities (no data shown).
The average provider reimbursement rate paid to personal care agencies is $19.90 per hour (Appendix Table 3).23 In the 15 states that report paying personal care service providers directly or mandating their reimbursement rates, the average rate is $17.26 per hour.
Community First Choice State Plan Benefit Policies
Eight states offer attendant services and supports under the Community First Choice (CFC) state plan option (Figure 1 and Appendix Table 1).24 These states include CA, CT, MD, MT, NY, OR, TX, and WA. States providing CFC services receive enhanced federal matching funds at an additional six percent. Key state policy choices about CFC financial eligibility and services are described below.
Nearly all CFC states choose to expand financial eligibility to beneficiaries who qualify for Medicaid under an HCBS waiver.25 All states electing the CFC option must provide services to individuals who either (1) are eligible for Medicaid in a state plan coverage group that includes nursing home services in the benefit package, or (2) have income at or below 150% of the federal poverty level (FPL, $18,735/year for an individual in 2019).26 States can choose to expand CFC eligibility to individuals who are eligible for Medicaid under an HCBS waiver; these waivers (described below) enable states to expand Medicaid financial eligibility up to 300% SSI ($27,756/year for an individual in 2019).27 Montana is the only CFC state that does not opt to expand financial eligibility to individuals who qualify for Medicaid under an HCBS waiver. In addition to meeting financial eligibility criteria, individuals receiving CFC services must have functional needs that would otherwise require an institutional level of care.
Half of CFC states choose to offer additional services beyond the minimum CFC benefit package. CFC services must include assistance with self-care, household activities, and health-related tasks,28 self-direction opportunities, and back-up systems.29 States also have the option to cover additional CFC services, including institutional to community transition costs30 and supports that increase or substitute for human assistance.31 Four states (CT, MD, OR, and WA) cover both types of optional CFC services, while three states offer the basic CFC benefit package (CA, MT, and TX).32
Section 1915 (i) State Plan Benefit Policies
Eleven states offer the Section 1915 (i) HCBS state plan option in FY 2018, and two more states newly added this option effective in FY 2019 (Figure 1 and Appendix Table 1). The 11 Section 1915 (i) states responding to the FY 2018 policy survey include CA, CT, DE, DC, ID, IN, IA, MS, OH, NV, and TX. In addition, Michigan has a new Section 1915 (i) HCBS state plan option, effective October 2018,33 and Arkansas newly elected the Section 1915 (i) HCBS state plan option, effective March 2019. Section 1915 (i) allows states to offer HCBS as part of their Medicaid state plan benefit package instead of through a waiver. Key state policy choices about Section 1915 (i) target populations, services, and eligibility are described below.
People with mental illness and those with intellectual or developmental disabilities (I/DD) are the target populations most commonly served under Section 1915 (i). Like waivers, states can target Section 1915 (i) services to a particular population. Four states (IA, IN, OH, and TX) target people with mental illness, four states (CA, DE, ID, and MS) target people with I/DD, and three states target seniors and/or people with physical disabilities (CT-seniors only, DC, and NV). Three states (ID, IN, and NV) have more than one Section 1915 (i) program serving different sub-populations.34
Home-based services are the most frequently covered type of service across all Section 1915 (i) target populations (in 8 of 10 states reporting)35 (Appendix Table 4). Other frequently covered Section 1915 (i) services include case management (7 states), day services (7 states), supported employment (6 states), and other mental/behavioral health services (6 states). Nursing/therapy services, round-the-clock services, and equipment/technology/modifications are less frequently covered under Section 1915 (i) (4 states), which likely reflects the fact that Section 1915 (i) functional eligibility is less than an institutional level of care. Box 1 lists the nine service categories included in our survey.
Box 1: Service Categories for Section 1915 (i) and Section 1915 (c) HCBS
States provide a range of different HCBS through the Section 1915 (i) state plan option and Section 1915 (c) waivers, which our survey groups into nine categories that reflect CMS’s HCBS Taxonomy:36 (1) case management; (2) home-based services (including personal care, companion services, home health, respite, chore/homemaker services, and home-delivered meals); (3) day services (including day habilitation and adult day health services); (4) nursing/other health/therapeutic services; (5) round-the-clock services (including in-home residential habilitation, supported living, and group living); (6) supported employment/training; (7) other mental health and behavioral services (including mental health assessment, crisis intervention, counseling, peer specialist); (8) equipment/technology/modifications (such as personal emergency response systems, home and/or vehicle accessibility adaptions); and (9) other services (including non-medical transportation, community transition services, payments to managed care, and goods and services).
States’ Section 1915 (i) benefit packages vary by target population (Appendix Table 4). For people with I/DD, home-based services, day services, and supported employment are the most frequently provided Section 1915 (i) services (in 3 of 4 states covering this population), while nursing/therapy and round-the-clock services are the least likely to be covered (1 of 4 states). For people with mental illness, Section 1915 (i) states most frequently provide case management, home-based, and other mental/behavioral health services (3 of 4 states covering this population) and are less likely to provide round-the-clock services and equipment/technology/modifications (1 of 4 states). Home-based services, day services, case management, and round-the-clock services are the most frequently covered Section 1915 (i) services for seniors/people with physical disabilities (2 of 3 states reporting).37
Two states opt to extend Section 1915 (i) financial eligibility to the federal maximum of 300% of SSI for certain individuals. Specifically, Idaho expands financial eligibility for both of its Section 1915 (i) programs (children with I/DD and adults with I/DD), while Indiana expands financial eligibility for one of its three programs (people with mental illness receiving behavioral health and primary care coordination).38 The other nine states provide Section 1915 (i) services to people with income up to 150% FPL. Under Section 1915 (i), states can cover (1) people who are eligible for Medicaid under the state plan up to 150% FPL, with no asset limit, who meet functional eligibility criteria; and also may cover (2) people up to 300% SSI who would be eligible for Medicaid under an existing HCBS waiver.
Idaho began using Section 1915 (i) as an independent Medicaid coverage pathway in FY 2018, joining two other states (IN and OH) electing this option. Idaho applies this policy to one of its two Section 1915 (i) target populations (children with developmental disabilities). Indiana applies this policy to one of its three Section 1915 (i) target populations (people with mental illness receiving behavioral health and primary care coordination). Ohio’s Section 1915 (i) option provides an independent eligibility pathway for people with mental illness. This option within Section 1915 (i) allows individuals who are not otherwise eligible under the state plan or a waiver to gain Medicaid coverage. The other eight states use Section 1915 (i) to authorize HCBS but require beneficiaries to be otherwise eligible for Medicaid through another coverage pathway.
Since adopting Section 1915 (i), no state has applied the option to restrict functional eligibility criteria to control enrollment. Unlike waivers, states are not permitted to cap enrollment or maintain a waiting list for Section 1915 (i) state plan HCBS. However, states can manage enrollment under Section 1915 (i) by restricting functional eligibility criteria if the state will exceed the number of beneficiaries that it anticipated serving. Functional eligibility for Section 1915 (i) HCBS requires beneficiaries to have needs that are less than what the state requires to qualify for an institutional level of care.
Section 1915 (c) and Section 1115 HCBS Waiver Policies
All states operate a total of 277 waivers to expand financial eligibility and offer HCBS to meet the needs of seniors and people with disabilities in the community. Nearly all of these waivers (265) are authorized under Section 1915 (c) (Appendix Table 5), while a minority (12) use Section 1115 to authorize HCBS (Appendix Table 6).39 Nine states (CA, DE, HI, NJ, NM, NY, TN, TX, and WA) serve some HCBS populations under a Section 1115 waiver and other HCBS populations through Section 1915 (c) waivers. Three other states (AZ, RI, and VT) use a Section 1115 waiver to provide HCBS to all covered populations and do not offer any Section 1915 (c) waivers. Both of these waiver authorities allow states to expand Medicaid financial eligibility and offer HCBS to seniors and people with disabilities who would otherwise qualify for an institutional level of care, target benefit packages to a particular population, and limit the number of people served.
Most states using a Section 1115 HCBS waiver require individuals to enroll in capitated managed care. The exception is Washington, which provides Section 1115 HCBS on a fee-for-service basis.40 Unlike Section 1915 (c) waivers, Section 1115 waivers can be used to authorize both HCBS and mandatory managed care enrollment. Alternatively, states can combine a Section 1915 (c) waiver with another managed care authority to permit or require HCBS beneficiaries to enroll in capitated managed care.41
CMS appears to be moving toward requiring states to operate joint Section 1915 (c)/1115 waivers if states want to require HCBS beneficiaries to enroll in capitated managed care. From 2008 to 2014, nine states eliminated Section 1915 (c) waivers and instead used Section 1115 waivers to authorize HCBS along with mandatory managed care (Figure 4). More recently, Kansas42 and North Carolina43 have been granted Section 1115 waiver authority to require beneficiaries to enroll in capitated managed care but continue to operate concurrent Section 1915 (c) waivers that authorize HCBS, instead of moving the HCBS authority to Section 1115. In addition, Rhode Island’s latest Section 1115 waiver renewal requires the state to transition HCBS authorized under Section 1115 to a Section 1915 (c) waiver or Section 1915 (i) state plan authority to the extent possible.44 Rhode Island’s waiver renewal also provides that any new HCBS that the state wants to implement after January 1, 2019 must be authorized under Section 1915 (c) or Section 1915 (i).45
The number of Section 1915 (c) waivers averages five per state and ranges from one to 11, depending on the number of populations served and how the state groups those populations (Appendix Table 5). Three states (DE, HI, and NJ) operate one Section 1915 (c) waiver and use Section 1115 waivers for all other HCBS populations. At the other end of the range, Connecticut and Colorado each operate 11 Section 1915 (c) waivers, and two states (MA and PA) each offer 10 Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to different populations. By contrast, all 12 states using stand-alone Section 1115 HCBS waivers serve multiple populations under a single waiver (Appendix Table 6).
Two states added new HCBS waivers to serve additional enrollees in FY 2018, while one state discontinued a waiver that is expected to result in fewer people receiving HCBS.46 California added a new Section 1915 (c) waiver to serve individuals with I/DD, while Washington added a Section 1115 waiver providing HCBS to multiple populations, including seniors and people with physical disabilities, mental health disabilities, and TBI. Colorado is the state that anticipates an overall decline in the number of HCBS enrollees as a result of eliminating its Section 1915 (c) waiver targeted to young children with autism (I/DD).
Population served
All states serve people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD),47 seniors, and nonelderly adults with physical disabilities48 through HCBS waivers (Figure 5, Appendix Tables 5 and 6). Fewer states use HCBS waivers to serve people with traumatic brain and/or spinal cord injuries (TBI/SCI),49 children who are medically fragile or technology dependent,50 people with mental health disabilities,51 and people with HIV/AIDS.52
Financial eligibility and post-eligibility treatment of income
Over three-quarters of HCBS waivers set the income eligibility limit at the federal maximum (Figure 6 and Appendix Table 7). States can use waivers to expand HCBS financial eligibility to a maximum monthly income of 300% of SSI ($2,313/month for an individual in 2019). A minority of HCBS waivers (15 in 4 states) set the monthly income limit at 100% of SSI ($771/month for an individual in 2019).
Nearly all HCBS waivers set income eligibility limits at or above the nursing home limit. Most HCBS waivers (248 in 43 states) waivers use the same income eligibility criteria as are required for nursing home eligibility (no data shown). Another 17 HCBS waivers in six states use income limits that are less stringent than those required for institutional care. A minority of waivers (12 in five states, MD, MI, MO, OR, TX) use income limits that are more restrictive than those required for institutional care, which could incentivize institutional care over HCBS. Using the same income limits for HCBS waivers and institutional care removes any potential bias in favor of institutional care, which can occur if an individualmust have less income and/or assets to receive HCBS than to receive institutional services.
Over three-quarters of HCBS waivers apply the federal SSI asset limit of $2,000 for an individual, while a notable minority do not have any asset limit (Figure 6). The 24 waivers without an asset limit are in seven states (CO, IN, MA, MO, NE, ND, and WI). Colorado does not apply an asset limit to any of its 11 HCBS waivers, while the other six states remove asset limits for only some waiver populations, most frequently medically fragile children and children with I/DD.53 In addition, 23 waivers in eight states (DC, MD, MN, MS, ND, NE, NH, RI) have an asset limit that is higher than the SSI amount, ranging from $2,500 to $4,000.54 Five states apply this higher asset limit to all waiver populations (DC, MN, MS, NH, and RI), while three states apply the higher asset limit to some but not all waiver populations.55 Connecticut is the only state that applies an asset limit lower than the federal SSI amount ($1,600 per individual).56
Once eligible for an HCBS waiver, over half (27) of states require an individual to contribute a portion of their monthly income to the cost of their care (no data shown). Certain beneficiaries receiving home and community-based waiver services57 must contribute a portion of their income to their cost of care, although states generally allow them to retain a monthly maintenance needs allowance, recognizing that recognizing that they must pay for room and board as well as other basic needs that Medicaid does not cover, such as clothing. There is no federal minimum maintenance needs allowance for HCBS waiver enrollees; instead, states may use any amount as long as it is based on a “reasonable assessment of need” and subject to a maximum that applies to all enrollees under the waiver.58 Eight states set the monthly maintenance needs allowance at $2,250 (300% of SSI) for at least one waiver,59 while four states use $1,012 (100% FPL).60 The remaining states report another amount, ranging from $100 in Montana to $2,082 in Maine.61 Amounts vary within some states by waiver program and/or living arrangement. For example, only individuals in assisted living facilities are required to contribute to their cost of care in Delaware and Maryland. The maintenance needs allowance established by states play a critical role in determining whether individuals can afford to remain in the community, as Medicaid HCBS does not cover room and board, and avoid or forestall institutional placement.
Functional eligibility
Nearly all (273 of 277) HCBS waivers use functional eligibility criteria that are the same as or less stringent than the criteria to qualify for nursing home services (no data shown). Most (253 in 51 states) HCBS waivers use the same functional eligibility criteria as are required for nursing facility eligibility, treating HCBS and institutional care equally. A minority of waivers (20 in 11 states) use functional eligibility criteria that are less stringent than those required for institutional care. Very few waivers (four in three states, CA, OK, and OR) use functional eligibility criteria that are more restrictive than those required for institutional care. Each of these four waivers serves medically fragile children and sets financial eligibility the same as for institutions, even though functional eligibility is more restrictive. Functional eligibility criteria typically include the extent of assistance needed to perform self-care (such as eating, bathing, or dressing) and/or household activities (such as preparing meals or managing medications). Using the same functional eligibility for HCBS waivers and institutional care removes any potential bias in favor of institutional care, which can occur if an individual must have greater functional needs to receive HCBS than to receive institutional services.
The majority of states (40 of 49 responding) rely on state or local government agencies to perform the functional needs assessment for waiver services, and most (32 of 49 responding) states rely on a combination of entities across waiver programs (no data shown).62 Thirteen states rely solely on state or local government agencies to perform assessments. Other entities include community-based organizations (11 states), health care providers (8 states), and managed care plans (4 states).
Nearly all (46 of 48 responding) states rely on state-specific tools to conduct the functional needs assessment for HCBS waivers (no data shown).63 Thirty-five states use multiple tools across different waiver programs to assess functional need. Some states rely on nationally recognized assessment tools, including Inter-RAI (16 states), OASIS (AL), and CHOICES (AR). Nearly all (47 of 48 responding) states have an exceptions process in place for beneficiaries to appeal functional assessment results.64
Waiver services
Home-based services and equipment/technology/modifications are among the most commonly offered waiver services across all states and target populations.65 Other frequently offered services across all states and waivers include day services, nursing/therapy, and case management. Box 1 above lists the nine service categories included in our survey.
Some services are more common in waivers that target certain populations. For example, supported employment services are offered in nearly three-quarters of all I/DD waivers and over half of TBI/SCI waivers, compared to about one-quarter of waivers targeting seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Case management services are included in three-quarters of waivers serving medically fragile or technology dependent children but less than half of mental health waivers. Mental health/behavioral services are offered in two-thirds of waivers targeting individuals with mental illness, compared to less than half of TBI/SCI waivers and just over a quarter of waivers targeting seniors and adults with physical disabilities. The variation in waiver benefit packages reflects state flexibility in designing benefit packages targeted to particular populations’ needs. Table 1 presents the share of waivers that cover each service category by target population.
Table 1: Share of HCBS Waivers that Provide Key Services, By Target Population, FY 2018
Target Population
Case Mgmt.
Home-based Services
Day Services
Nursing/Therapy Services
Round-the-Clock Services
Supported Employment
Other Mental Health/Behavioral Services
Equipment/Technology/Modifications
I/DD
54%
88%
75%
68%
51%
74%
69%
86%
Seniors & People with Disabilities
62%
85%
61%
70%
40%
24%
27%
78%
Medically Fragile/Tech. Dependent Children
75%
67%
17%
46%
17%
21%
17%
63%
Mental Illness
42%
75%
17%
33%
25%
42%
67%
50%
HIV/AIDS
60%
100%
40%
100%
20%
0%
40%
80%
TBI/SCI
58%
81%
65%
58%
54%
62%
38%
85%
NOTES: Includes both § 1915 (c) and 1115 waivers. Section 1115 waiver services were assigned to the main population targeted by the waiver: seniors/adults with physical disabilities and/or people with I/DD.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Survey, FY 2018.
Self-direction and provider type
Waivers targeting seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities and people with TBI/SCI are most likely to offer enrollees the option to self-direct services, while mental health waivers are least likely to do so (Figure 7). Nearly all states allow beneficiaries in at least one HCBS waiver to self-direct services (Appendix Table 8).66 The exception is Alaska. In all 50 self-direction states, beneficiaries can select, train, and dismiss their direct care workers and set worker schedules.67 In 39 states, beneficiaries also can determine worker pay rates, and in 33 states, beneficiaries can decide how to allocate their service budgets.
Almost all states enable waiver enrollees to choose either agency-employed or independent providers, and over half of states allow legally responsible relatives to be paid providers (Appendix Table 8). All states offer agency-employed providers, and all but two states (DC and RI) offer independent providers. Thirty states allow certain legally responsible relatives (e.g. spouse, parent) to be paid providers.68
Utilization controls
Waiting lists
More than three-quarters of states (41 of 51) report an HCBS waiver waiting list for at least one waiver target population (Appendix Table 9). In addition to expanding financial eligibility and offering benefits targeted to a particular population, HCBS waivers allow states to choose – and limit – how many people are served. States’ ability to cap HCBS waiver enrollment can result in waiting lists when the number of people seeking services exceeds the number of waiver slots available. The 10 states without any waiver waiting lists are AZ, DC, DE, HI, ID, MA, NJ, RI, VT, and WA.
Nearly 820,000 people are on HCBS waiver waiting lists nationally (Figure 8 and Appendix Table 9).69 Waiting lists are a function of the populations a state chooses to serve and how the state defines those populations; both of these factors vary among states, making waiting lists an incomplete measure of state capacity and demand for HCBS and not directly comparable among states. While all states have waivers serving people with I/DD, seniors, and adults with physical disabilities, fewer states offer waiver services for other target populations. Consequently, there may be a particular population in need of services, but the state does not keep a waiting list because it does not offer a waiver for that population. In addition, as described above, all states do not define the eligibility criteria for their waiver target populations in the same way.
All individuals on waiting lists ultimately may not be eligible for waiver services. For example, 33 states with waiting lists screen individuals for waiver eligibility before they are placed or while they are on a waiting list, while eight states do not. Notably, the eight states that do not screen for waiver eligibility comprise 61% (499,000) of the total waiting list population.70 Box 2 provides examples of recent changes in state waiver waiting list assessment policies.
Box 2: State Waiver Waiting List Policy Changes
Two states reported new waiver waiting list policies in FY 2018. Ohio adopted a new assessment tool in an effort to better understand the current needs of individuals on its I/DD waiver waiting lists.71 Ohio’s new assessment is in response to a study finding that 45% of its I/DD waiting list population had no current areas of unmet need; rather, individuals were joining the waiting list “well in advance of their need” for waiver services because they anticipated a lengthy wait.72 Another new Ohio policy requires county boards of developmental disabilities to address a person’s immediate needs within 30 days, through community resources, local funds, state plan services, or waiver services. Louisiana also adopted a new assessment tool to determine if individuals on its I/DD waiver waiting list require services now or in the near future to avoid institutionalization.73 Those with the highest scores on the new assessment are offered a waiver slot, and others will be rescreened at regular intervals or upon request.
Waiver waiting lists increased by 16 percent from FY 2017 to FY 2018, attributed primarily to the increase in Texas (Figure 8 and Appendix Table 10).74 This is higher than the average annual percent change in waiting list enrollment over the last 16 years, which was 10 percent. It also represents the highest annual percent increase since FY 2011, when waiting lists grew by 19 percent. Texas’ waiting list growth accounts for over 90% of the overall national increase in waiver waiting lists. In FY 2017, Texas’ waiver waiting list was 40% of the national waiting list total. In FY 2018, Texas’ share increased to nearly half (47%) of the national total. Texas does not determine eligibility before putting an individual on a waiting list, which is a possible contributing factor to the state’s increase.
Overall, 18 states reported an increase in total waiting lists from FY 2017 to FY 2018, and 15 states reported a decrease from FY 2017 to FY 2018, indicating state-level variation in waiting list trends (Appendix Table 10). Three states reported no notable change in waiver waiting lists from FY 2017 to FY 2018.75 Waiting list changes also varied by population, with growth occurring among waivers targeting individuals with I/DD (25%), seniors (19%), and individuals with mental health disabilities (10%). In contrast, waivers serving individuals with TBI/SCI, medically fragile children, and seniors and adults with physical disabilities experienced declines (-51%, -6% and -1% respectively) in the number of individuals on waiting lists for services between FY 2017 and FY 2018.
Although some people joined waiver waiting lists between FY 2017 and FY 2018, others left a waiting list and began receiving waiver services during this period. For example, 53,000 people moved off waiting lists and began receiving services in FY 2018, in the 33 (of 41) states that could report this data.76 People may move off a waiting list and begin receiving services when a state increases waiver capacity by funding new slots or when an existing waiver enrollee stops receiving services due to a change in income, functional need, age, state residency, or another reason relevant to waiver eligibility.
People with I/DD comprise over 70 percent (about 590,000 in 37 states)77 of total waiver waiting lists (Figure 9 and Appendix Table 9). Seniors and adults with physical disabilities account for about one-quarter (about 199,000 in 20 states)78 of total waiting lists. The remaining four percent of waiver waiting lists is spread among other populations, including children who are medically fragile or technology dependent (about 27,000 in five states),79 people with traumatic brain or spinal cord injuries (TBI/SCI, about 1,700 in seven states),80 people with mental illness (about 1,500 in four states),81 and people with HIV/AIDS (about 80 in 1 state).82
Figure 9: Medicaid HCBS waiver waiting list enrollment by target population, FY 2018
The waiting period for waiver services averages 39 months across all waivers with waiting lists, with substantial variation by target population (Appendix Table 11).83 The average waiting period by population ranged from one month for a waiver targeting people with HIV/AIDS (in 1 state) to 71 months for waivers targeting people with I/DD.
Almost all (38 of 41) states with waiting lists prioritize individuals with certain characteristics to receive services when slots become available.84 For example, 27 states offer waivers that give priority to individuals who meet specific crisis or emergency criteria, 24 states prioritize people who are moving from an institution to the community, and 22 states prioritize people who are at risk of entering an institution without waiver services (no data shown). Fewer states prioritize individuals based on assessed level of need (16) or age (5). Other reasons states use to prioritize individuals on waiting lists include aging caregiver, loss of primary caregiver, child in foster care, homelessness, or danger to self or others. Thirty-two states use more than one priority group.85
All states with waiting lists provide non-waiver Medicaid services (i.e., state plan services) to people who are waiting for waiver services. Medicaid state plan services can include some HCBS, such as home health, personal care, or case management. Some states also may provide services funded with state dollars that are allocated to county-based programs to individuals on a Medicaid waiver waiting list. Nearly all (94%) of people on waiver waiting lists currently live in the community in 27 (of 41) states reporting this data.86
Hour, cost, and geographic limits
Nearly three-quarters of states use hour, cost, or geographic limits to control utilization in their HCBS waivers (Appendix Table 12).87 Among these states, 19 use more than one type of utilization control, including 16 states with caps on both the number of service hours and the amount spent per enrollee, one state (CO) with both spending and geographic limits, and two states (CA and OH) with all three of these utilization controls. Another 15 states use only spending caps, such as such as limiting the cost of HCBS to a percentage of the nursing facility reimbursement rate or applying a maximum service cost based on a functional needs assessment score. Two states (AR and DC) use only hourly service caps, such as day, week, or annual limits. Services to which states apply hourly service caps include supported living, day habilitation, case management, respite, home modifications/environmental accessibility, skilled nursing, peer support, medical supplies, supported employment, and transition assistance. Most states (15 of 20 with hour caps88 and 25 of 34 with cost caps)89 allow exceptions to their utilization limits. The remaining 14 states do not apply any of these HCBS waiver service utilization controls.
States with utilization controls typically apply them to both self-directed and non-self-directed (e.g., agency-provided) services. Among the 20 states with both hourly caps and self-direction, most (14) apply these caps to both self-directed services and other services. Four states (LA, MO, MT, and NY) apply hourly limits only to non-self-directed services, and two states (ND and PA) apply hourly limits only to self-directed services. Similarly, most states (25 of 34) apply cost caps (typically per year) to both self-directed and other services, while nine states apply cost caps to only non self-directed services. No state applies a cost cap only to self-directed services.
Application of state utilization controls varies by waiver target population, with at least half of all waivers that serve people with TBI/SCI (58%), HIV/AIDS (60%), and mental illness (50%) applying at least one utilization control. Other waiver populations see smaller rates of utilization control application, with one-third of waivers that serve medically fragile children applying at least one utilization control. All target populations have some waivers that apply spending caps or service hour limits, except that waivers serving people with HIV/AIDS apply spending caps but not service hour limits. Spending caps are a more common utilization control than service hour limits across all target populations, with about twice as many waivers applying spending caps as service hour limits.
Quality measures
All states monitor HCBS waiver quality, but no set of standardized measures is used across programs. Most HCBS waiver quality measures are based on CMS reporting requirements for Section 1915 (c) waivers, and these measures tend to be process, not outcome, oriented. For example, states must identify Section 1915 (c) waiver performance measures to evaluate level of care determinations, provider qualifications, service plans, enrollee health and welfare, and financial compliance.90 In recent years, states have begun to expand HCBS quality measures to add beneficiary experience measures, such as quality of life, community integration, and LTSS rebalancing, described below.
Forty-six states measure beneficiary quality of life when monitoring HCBS waiver quality (Appendix Table 12). Quality of life measures include assessing an individual’s level of satisfaction with their current living situation, degree of control over their daily activities, and whether services are adequate to their support needs. Among these specific quality of life measures, level of satisfaction with current living situation (22 states) was the most commonly reported measure. States measuring quality of life most commonly rely on the National Core Indicators (NCI) surveys for seniors and adults with physical disabilities91 and/or for individuals with I/DD92 (30 states). Ten states use other state-specific tools, and four states (CT, OH, PA, and WV) use the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) HCBS survey.93 States can use more than one tool to measure quality of life.94
Forty-four states have waiver quality measures to assess community integration (Appendix Table 12). Community integration measures include the ability to choose where one lives or the amount of community involvement in work and/or leisure activities. Among these specific community integration measures, the ability to choose where an enrollee lives (19 states) was the most commonly reported measure. States measuring community integration most commonly use the NCI surveys (21 states), followed by state-specific tools (13 states), and the CAHPS survey (3 states, CT, PA, WV).95
Twenty-five states measure LTSS rebalancing when assessing HCBS waiver quality (Appendix Table 12). To do so, states may collect information on the number of enrollees in institutions versus the community, the number of individuals transitioning from institutions to the community, and/or the number of individuals transitioning from the community to institutions. Among these specific rebalancing measures, the number of individuals transitioning from institutions to the community (9 states) was the most commonly reported measure. No state reported measuring the number of individuals transitioning from the community to institutions. States measuring rebalancing utilize various tools including Money Follows the Person program benchmarks (12 states), state-specific tools (6 states), and the NCI-IDD survey (one state).96
Ombuds programs
Forty-one states have an HCBS waiver ombudsman program, typically as part of state government, to assist waiver enrollees (Appendix Table 12).97 Thirty-two states have an ombuds program that is solely within state government, while four (HI, IN, TN, and WI) have ombuds programs that include both state government and non-governmental entities. For example, in Wisconsin, ombuds services for seniors are provided through a governmental entity (the Board on Aging and Long-Term Care), while ombuds services for non-elderly adults with disabilities are provided through a contract with a community-based organization (the state’s protection and advocacy agency for people with disabilities). Tennessee uses governmental agencies (Area Agencies on Aging and Disability) to provide ombuds services for individuals receiving community-based residential alternatives and also contracts with a community-based organization (the state’s protection and advocacy agency) to provide broader ombuds services. Two states (AZ and RI) have ombudsman programs solely operated by a community-based agency, and three states (LA, NY, and VT) rely solely on another type of entity. Ombudsman programs may provide enrollment options counseling, assist beneficiaries with health plan appeals, offer information about state fair hearings, track beneficiary complaints, train health plans and providers about community-based services and supports that can be linked with Medicaid-covered services, and report data and systemic issues to states.98
Medicaid Capitated Managed LTSS (MLTSS) Programs
Twenty-five states deliver some or all HCBS through capitated (risk-based) managed long-term services and supports (MLTSS) programs (Figure 10 and Appendix Table 13).99 In addition, survey findings in this section include responses from Arkansas, which implemented the capitated portion of its MLTSS program for people with I/DD and behavioral health needs in FY 2019,100 for a total of 26 states reporting MLTSS policies. About half of MLTSS states implement capitated managed care through a Section 1115 waiver, while the remaining states use another managed care authority, such as a Section 1915 (b) waiver, the Section 1932 state plan option, or Section 1915 (a) authority. Two states implemented new MLTSS programs in FY 2018: Louisiana has a joint Section 1915 (b)/(c) waiver providing specialty behavioral health services and HCBS for children with serious emotional disturbance effective February 2018,101 and Pennsylvania has a joint Section 1915 (b)/(c) waiver that includes individuals with I/DD, seniors, adults with physical disabilities, and individuals with TBI, with enrollment effective January 2018.102 In addition, one state, North Carolina, is in the process of changing its MLTSS authority from joint Section 1915 (b)/(c) waivers to joint Section 1115/1915 (c) waivers for people with I/DD and TBI.103
Figure 10: Over half of states have a capitated managed long-term services and supports (MLTSS) program, as of FY 2018
Rebalancing incentives in MLTSS programs
About half of capitated MLTSS states use financial incentives for health plans to offer HCBS instead of institutional care (Appendix Table 13). The most common type of rebalancing incentive is a blended capitation rate that includes both institutional and home and community-based LTSS, used in 11 states. Two states (FL and SC) offer bonus payments to health plans based on institutional to community transitions.104 Six MLTSS states do not include financial incentives for HCBS over institutional services.105
Value-based payment in MLTSS programs
Seven capitated MLTSS states currently are using value-based payment (VBP) models for HCBS,106 and 10 states plan to implement new or expanded VBP models for HCBS in the future107 (Appendix Table 13). Among the states with current models, four require health plans to use VBP arrangements (AZ, AR, TN, and WI), and two encourage health plans to use VBP arrangements (NY and VA). For example, Arizona requires its health plans to have a certain proportion of provider payments made through VBP; the target percentage varies by provider type and population, ranging from 35 percent for seniors and adults with physical disabilities to five percent for adults with I/DD. The remaining state, Iowa, encourages VBP arrangements for all waiver populations, except for individuals with HIV/AIDS and seniors where VBP is required. VBP models generally include any initiative in which a state Medicaid program seeks to hold providers and/or health plans accountable for the cost and quality of care that they provide or finance.108 These models seek to shift the focus away from payment based solely on the provision of individual services, as in the fee-for-service model, which is critiqued as incentivizing service volume. Instead, VBP seeks to account for the value and quality of services delivered through shared savings/shared risk arrangements, episode-based payments, or other alternative payment models.109
The most commonly used VBP model for HCBS is pay for performance, used by four of seven states (AZ, AR, IA & WI).110 A pay for performance model seeks to improve care coordination and care quality and reduce overall spending by tying payment to care that meets specific goals or quality standards. For example, Wisconsin’s Family Care pay for performance model bases payments on results from an enrollee survey and competitive integrated employment. In Arkansas, the Provider-led Arkansas Shared Savings Entity (PASSE) program, serving individuals with I/DD or mental illness, will use both shared savings and incentive payments that are tied to reporting/achieving certain outcome or quality measures.111 Tennessee uses an outcome-based reimbursement model for supported employment services provided to people with I/DD. Tennessee’s program includes outcome-based reimbursement for up-front services leading to employment; tiered outcome-based reimbursement for job development and self-employment start-up services based on the individual’s acuity level and paid in phases to support job tenure; and tiered reimbursement for job coaching, based on acuity and taking into account the length of time the person has held the job and the amount of paid support required as a percentage of hours worked, with the goal of paid supports fading over time. Virginia encourages its health plans to establish VBP arrangements with all provider types, including HCBS, but does not require a specific model.
LTSS provisions in the 2016 Medicaid managed care rule
Most capitated MLTSS states have adopted policies to comply with the 2016 Medicaid managed care regulations (Figure 11 and Appendix Table 13). The 2016 regulations, issued under the Obama Administration, addressed MLTSS for the first time and included new provisions for LTSS provider network adequacy standards, independent enrollment choice counseling, disenrollment for cause if an LTSS provider leaves the health plan network, stakeholder advisory committees, and LTSS quality measures; different provisions of the regulations had different effective dates.112 However, in November 2018, under the Trump Administration, CMS proposed some changes to the 2016 regulations, most notably to the network adequacy standards.113 The public comment period closed in January 2019, and the proposed changes have not yet been finalized. CMS also issued a June 2017 informational bulletin indicating that it “intends to use [its] enforcement discretion. . . when states are unable to implement new and potentially burdensome requirements of the final [managed care] rule by the required compliance date, particularly provisions with a compliance deadline of contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2017,” while changes to the managed care regulations are pending.114
Figure 11: Most capitated MLTSS states have adopted policies to comply with the 2016 regulations, as of FY 2018
LTSS Network Adequacy Standards
Over three-quarters of capitated MLTSS states require network adequacy standards for HCBS providers (Figure 11 and Table 2).115 The 2016 managed care regulations require states to develop time and distance standards for MLTSS providers when the enrollee must travel to the provider, and network adequacy standards other than time and distance standards for MLTSS providers that travel to the enrollee to deliver services. These standards are required for health plan contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2018. However, CMS’s November 2018 proposed rule would remove the requirement for time and distance standards and instead would allow states to choose another quantitative standard, such as minimum provider-to-enrollee ratios, maximum travel time or distance to providers, minimum percentage of contracting providers accepting new patients, maximum wait times for an appointment, orhours of operation requirements.116
The most commonly used HCBS network adequacy standard is based on time and distance, when the enrollee must travel to the provider, used by 14 states (Table 2). Over half of capitated MLTSS states with HCBS network adequacy standards (12 of 21) include more than one type of standard.117 For example, Tennessee includes time and distance to provider (for site-based services, such as adult day services), minimum provider to enrollee ratio, and maximum travel time or distance (including a choice of providers for every service in every county), while Texas includes time and distance to provider, hours of operation requirements, and maximum wait time for an appointment. No state reported requiring a minimum percentage of contracting providers who are accepting new patients.
Table 2: State MLTSS Network Adequacy Standards for HCBS Providers, FY 2018
Standard
Number of States Adopting, out of 26 Capitated MLTSS States:
Time and Distance to Provider
14 states (AZ, DE, FL, ID, KS, LA, MI, NM, PA, SC, TN, TX, VA, WI)
Minimum Provider to Enrollee Ratio
8 states (AR, FL, HI, ID, OH, SC, TN, WI)
Maximum Travel Time or Distance to Provider
6 states (ID, LA, NY, SC, TN, VA)
Hours of Operation Requirements
5 states (AZ, FL, LA, NY, TX)
Maximum Wait Time for an Appointment
4 states (DE, LA, NY, TX)
Another Standard
9 states (AZ, DE, IA, MI, MN, NJ, SC, TN, TX)
No Network Adequacy Standard Reported
5 states (CA, IL, MA, NC, RI)
SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Independent Enrollment Options Counseling
Most MLTSS states offer independent enrollment options counseling (Figure 11 and Appendix Table 13). States most often contract with a third party enrollment broker for options counseling (8 states), while others rely on community-based organizations (5 states) or another entity (4 states).118 In addition, Arizona provides options counseling through the state Medicaid agency instead of a third-party entity.119 CMS’s 2016 Medicaid managed care regulations require all states to offer enrollee choice counseling through the independent beneficiary support system required in health plan contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2018.120 Options counseling seeks to help MLTSS enrollees select a health plan; this population may not be familiar with that process because they traditionally have been enrolled in the fee-for-service delivery system. MLTSS enrollees also may seek assistance with choosing a health plan to find a provider network that best meets their various needs – which may go beyond primary care to include specialists, behavioral health providers, durable medical equipment suppliers, and personal care attendants – and preserves their existing provider relationships to the extent possible.
Disenrollment If LTSS Provider Leaves Plan Network
Most MLTSS states allow individuals to disenroll from their health plan if their residence or employment would be disrupted as a result of an LTSS provider leaving the health plan network (Figure 11 and Appendix Table 13).121 Under the 2016 Medicaid managed care regulations, states must consider these circumstances as good cause for disenrollment for health plan contracts beginning or after July 1, 2017.122 Another state, Arizona, does not allow individuals to disenroll from a health plan for employment disruptions; however, if a skilled nursing facility or assisted living facility leaves the health plan provider network, Arizona requires the health plan to continue pay for those services until the individual’s next open enrollment period in order to mitigate disruption in residential placement.
Stakeholder Advisory Committees
Nearly all MLTSS states have a state-level managed care advisory committee and require health plans to have a stakeholder advisory committee (Figure 11 and Appendix Table 13).123 The 2016 Medicaid managed care regulations require states to create and maintain a stakeholder group to solicit and address the opinions of beneficiaries, individuals representing beneficiaries, providers, and other stakeholders in the design, implementation, and oversight of a state’s MLTSS program. In addition, health plans providing MLTSS must have a member advisory committee that includes at least a reasonably representative sample of the populations receiving LTSS covered by the plan or other individuals representing those enrollees. These provisions are effective for health plan contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2017.124
MLTSS Quality Measures
Over half of MLTSS states have adopted at least one MLTSS quality measure (Figure 11 and Table 3).125 The 2016 Medicaid managed care rule requires states that provide MLTSS to identify standard performance measures related to quality of life, rebalancing, and community integration for health plan contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2017.126 To assist states in this area, CMS developed eight MLTSS quality measures, with the goal of creating nationally standardized measures to enable comparisons of state MLTSS programs performance.127 Most of these states (10 of 14) are using at least one of CMS’s recommended measures, while the remaining states are using other state-specific measures (MI, NJ, VA, and WI). Among these 10 states using CMS recommended measures, nearly all have adopted three or more of the eight measures. The exception is New Mexico, which has adopted one of the recommended measures.
Table 3: State Use of MLTSS Quality Measures, FY 2018
Measure Type
Number of States Adopting Measure, out of 26 Capitated MLTSS States:
CMS Recommended Measures
Comprehensive Assessment
9 states (AZ, DE, FL, IA, MN, PA, RI, SC, TN)
Comprehensive Care Plan and Update
9 states (AZ, DE, FL, IA, MN, PA, RI, SC, TN)
Screening, Risk Assessment and Plan of Care to Prevent Future Falls
5 states (DE, IA, MN, PA, SC)
Successful Transition After Long-Term Institutional Stay
5 states (DE, IA, NM, PA, SC)
Re-Assessment/Care Plan Update After Inpatient Discharge
4 states (FL, IA, PA, TN)
Shared Care Plan with Primary Care Practitioner
4 states (AZ, FL, IA, TN)
Admission to Institution from the Community
3 states (DE, IA, PA)
Minimizing Institutional Length of Stay
2 states (IA, SC)
Another Measure
4 states (MI, NJ, VA, WI)
No Measure
12 states (AR, CA, HI, ID, IL, KS, LA, MA, NY, NC, OH, TX)
SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Electronic Visit Verification Rule
States are working to meet electronic verification visit (EVV) requirements for all Medicaid personal care services and home health services that require an in-home visit by a provider.128 This new policy requires electronic verification of the type of service performed; the individual receiving the service; the service date; the location of service delivery; the individual providing the service; and the time the service begins and ends.129 EVV seeks to reduce unauthorized services, fraud, waste, and abuse and improve service quality.130 The EVV requirement is part of the 21st Century Cures Act and applies to all personal care and home health services provided under state plan or waiver authority.131 States are required to implement EVV for personal care services by January 1, 2020, and home health services by January 1, 2023.132
Four states already have EVV systems in place for all personal care state plan and waiver services, and another 12 states have implemented EVV for some but not all personal care services (Figure 12 and Appendix Table 14). In general, states report wide variation in EVV implementation across their personal care state plan and waiver programs, with few states having EVV systems in place for personal care services provided under all authorities. The states that have implemented EVV for all personal care services to date are Alabama, Louisiana, New Mexico, and Rhode Island. Eighteen percent (6 of 34 states)133 of state plan personal care programs and 19 percent of all waivers offering personal care services (41 of 216 waivers in 15 states) had an EVV system in place for personal care services inFY 2018.
Figure 12: State implementation of electronic visit verification for personal care services as of FY 2018
About half of states expect to have EVV in place for some or all personal care services by the January 2020 deadline (Appendix Table 14). Seven of these states (AR, ME, NV, SD, VT, WA, and WV) expect to have EVV in place for all personal care state plan and waiver authorities, and the remainder expect to have EVV in place for some but not all personal care authorities. States that fail to implement EVV for personal care services by January 2020 are subject to incremental reductions in federal Medicaid matching funds, up to one percent.134 However, CMS can grant an exemption from federal funding reductions to states that make a good faith effort to comply but encounter unavoidable delays, though the exemption authority only applies to 2020.135 Most states already have requested or plan to request such an exemption. CMS began accepting exemption requests in July 2019, and as of February 2020, 40 states had been approved.136
Few states already have EVV systems in place for home health state plan services, although most expect to do so by the January 2023 deadline (Appendix Table 14). Among the states that have not yet implemented EVV for home health services, a dozen expect to do so prior to the 2023 deadline. As for personal care services, states that do not implement EVV for home health services by January 2023 are subject to incremental reductions in federal matching funds, although CMS can grant a one year exemption from these reductions to states that have made a good faith effort to comply but have encountered unavoidable delays.137
Nearly all states have selected an EVV model for personal care services (46 of 51)138 and home health services (41 of 51),139 with an open vendor model as the most common choice (Appendix Table 14). States have flexibility to choose their EVV model.140 Eighteen states are using an open vendor model for personal care services, and 16 are doing so for home health services. In an open vendor model, the state contracts with a single vendor or builds its own EVV system but also allows providers and health plans to use other vendors. Seven states are using a state mandated external vendor model for personal care services and six are doing so for home health services. In this model, the state contacts with a single EVV vendor that all providers must use. Six states are using a provider choice model for personal care services, and seven are doing so for home health services. In a provider choice model, providers select an EVV vendor and fund system implementation. One state (LA) is using a state-mandated in-house system for home health EVV, which involves the state creating and managing its own EVV system. The remaining states report using “another” model, which could include a hybrid approach. For example, Tennessee is allowing health plans to select an EVV vendor and fund its implementation. Most states have selected the same EVV model for personal care and home health services, although seven states have selected different models.141
Over half of states (32 of 51) states report challenges with meeting the EVV requirements for personal care and/or home health services. Common challenges include issues related to provider outreach and education (22 states), establishing an EVV system in rural areas (21 states), accommodating enrollees who self-direct services (21 states), and enrollee outreach and education (18 states). About half (24) of states cite multiple challenges with EVV implementation. Provider outreach and education can be challenging given the diversity and often high turnover rate of HCBS providers. Challenges in rural areas include establishing systems that can accommodate enrollees and providers who may lack cellphone or internet access. EVV for enrollees who self-direct services can be challenging to align with the system used by fiscal agents.
HCBS Settings Rule
Nearly all states (47 of 51) already have changed or anticipated having to change a rule or policy to come into compliance with the home and community-based settings rule (Figure 13 and Appendix Table 15).142 This includes 38 states that made changes prior to FY 2018, and 33 states that were making new or additional changes in FY 2018. The January 2014 rule defines the qualities of residential and non-residential settings in which Medicaid-funded HCBS can be provided.143 To be considered community-based, a setting must support an individual’s full access to the greater community; be selected by the individual from options including non-disability specific settings; ensure individual privacy, dignity, respect and freedom from coercion or restraint; optimize individual autonomy in making life choices; and facilitate individual choice regarding services and providers. Additional criteria apply to provider-owned or controlled settings. CMS extended the original state compliance deadline by three years, to March 2022, and states’ transition plans were due in March 2019.144 As of February 2020, 15 states have received final CMS approval on their transition plan,145 and another 30 states have received initial approval.146
Figure 13: State policy choices about Medicaid HCBS settings rule, 2018
Among the policy changes states are making to comply with the settings rule, most are related to settings that do not meet the rule’s requirements and need to be modified in some way to continue to be used for Medicaid-funded HCBS. To date, 39 states have identified settings that need to be modified (Figure 13).147 The number of settings that must be modified varies substantially by state, ranging from the single digits in Alabama, Arkansas, and Wyoming, to several hundred in other states, to one thousand or more in Hawaii, Indiana, Michigan, New Hampshire, Oregon, and South Carolina (Appendix Table 15).148
Additionally, 20 states have identified settings that cannot be modified to meet the settings rule and consequently will require beneficiaries to be relocated to continue receiving Medicaid-funded HCBS (Figure 13).149 Relatively few settings per state fall into this category, ranging from one in Delaware and Florida to 20 in North Carolina (Appendix Table 14),150 although any relocation has the potential to be disruptive to the affected beneficiaries.
Over half of states have identified settings that are presumed institutional because they effectively isolate beneficiaries as a result of the settings rule (Figure 13).151 Most states have relatively few settings in this category, with the exception of Michigan, which has identified over 1,000 settings that may isolate individuals with I/DD (Appendix Table 15).152 The settings rule presumes that certain settings are not community-based because they have institutional qualities, such as those in a facility that provides inpatient treatment, those on the grounds of or adjacent to a public institution, and those that have the effect of isolating individuals from the broader community.
Less than half of states plan to submit or already have submitted information to the HHS Secretary to overcome the rule’s presumption that a specific setting is institutional so that Medicaid-funded HCBS can continue to be provided there (Figure 13).153 The number of settings for which each state plans to seek to overcome the institutional presumption ranges from the single digits in Delaware, Nevada, North Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming, to over 200 in Minnesota (Appendix Table 15).154 The Secretary can overcome the institutional presumption for these settings by applying heightened scrutiny based on information submitted by the state.155
Direct Care Worker Minimum Wage and Overtime Rule
Twenty-one states already have or are planning to restrict worker hours or make other policy changes in response to the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) minimum wage and overtime rules (Figure 14 and Appendix Table 16). Specifically, seven states report new plans to restrict worker hours or make other policy changes for the first time in FY 2018, while the remaining states are continuing to apply restrictions or other policy changes implemented in a prior year. The DOL extended the Fair Labor Standards Act minimum wage and overtime rules to most direct care workers (such as certified nursing assistants, home health aides, personal care aides, and other caregivers, who previously were exempt from those requirements) in rules that took effect in 2015.156 CMS policy guidance anticipated that the new DOL rules could affect self-directed Medicaid HCBS and observed that “many states will need to develop policies and consider programmatic changes to address the costs related to overtime and/or worker time spent traveling between worksites (i.e., individuals’ homes), to avoid or minimize negative impacts to individual [service] budgets, and to preserve the ability of individuals to self-direct services and supports effectively.”157
Figure 14: State policy choices about DOL direct care worker minimum wage and overtime rule, 2018
Among the states reporting policy changes in response to the DOL rules, 14 states limit worker hours to 40 per week (Figure 14 and Appendix Table 16). States newly restricting worker hours to 40 per week in FY 2018 include AL, DE, GA, KY, OR, and VA. Some states allow worker overtime if certain conditions are met. For example, New Jersey’s self-directed program allows workers to provide care over 40 hours by filing a live-in exemption. In Ohio, independent direct care workers are limited to 60 hours per week.
Seventeen states reported budgeting state funds for worker overtime and/or travel time pay in 2019 as a result of the DOL rule (Figure 14 and Appendix Table 16). Of these, 13 states (AZ, CA, CT, IL, MA, MS, ND, NE, OH, OR, SC, WA, and WI) budgeted funds for both direct care worker overtime and travel pay, and four states (LA, PA, UT, and VT) budgeted funds for overtime only.
Looking Ahead
The optional nature of most Medicaid HCBS and the substantial flexibility available to states in designing their programs results in considerable variation among states in eligibility, scope of benefits, and delivery systems. These state policy choices shape HCBS in important ways for the seniors and people with disabilities and chronic illnesses who rely on HCBS to live independently in the community. Today, Medicaid HCBS benefit packages vary among states, reflecting the optional nature of most HCBS. States continue to rely on waivers as the primary HCBS authority. Over three-quarters of states report an HCBS waiver waiting list, with state-level variation in waiting list enrollment trends. State use of capitated MLTSS delivery systems continues, with VBP for HCBS emerging as an area of state interest. States also are making policy changes in response to other federal laws and regulations related to HCBS, with a majority of states reporting challenges with meeting the new EVV requirements. States are further along in adopting policy changes to meet CMS’s home and community-based settings rule and the U.S. DOL minimum wage and overtime rules as they affect direct care workers.
The U.S. remains in the longest period of economic expansion in history. A future economic downturn could affect the availability of HCBS services. During the Great Recession and immediately afterward, the number of states reporting HCBS expansions declined slightly. A future economic downturn could potentially have similar implications for many optional services offered under Medicaid, including HCBS. States face increased budget pressures during times of economic recession, but regardless of economic outlook will face additional pressure to meet the health and LTSS needs of a growing elderly population in the near future. Understanding the variation in Medicaid HCBS state policies is important for analyzing the implications of this demographic change as well as the implications of a range of policy changes that could fundamentally restructure federal Medicaid financing or the larger U.S. health care system. For example, substantially cutting and capping the federal Medicaid funds available to states through a block grant or per capita cap could put pressure on states to eliminate optional covered populations and services, such as those that authorize and expand the availability of HCBS. While all states could face challenges in this scenario to varying degrees, those with certain characteristics– such as existing restrictive Medicaid policies; demographics like poverty, old age, or poor health status that reflect high needs; high cost healthcare markets; or low state fiscal capacity – could face greater challenges. On the other hand, moving to a Medicare-for-all system would eliminate existing state variation in favor uniform coverage of HCBS for all Americans. Unlike Medicaid, HCBS would be required and explicitly prioritized over institutional services under current Medicare-for-all proposals. As these policy debates develop, there will be continued focus on Medicaid’s role in providing HCBS for seniors and people with disabilities.
MaryBeth Musumeci and Priya Chidambaram are with KFF.Molly O’Malley Watts is with Watts Health Policy Consulting.
Appendix Tables
Appendix Table 1: State Adoption of Medicaid HCBS by Authority, FY 2018
Appendix Table 2: State Policy Choices About Medicaid Home Health State Plan Benefits, FY 2018
Appendix Table 3: State Policy Choices About Medicaid Personal Care State Plan Benefits, FY 2018
Appendix Table 4: Section 1915 (i) State Plan Services by State and Target Population, FY 2018
Appendix Table 7: State Financial Eligibility Criteria for Medicaid HCBS Waivers by Target Population, FY 2018
Appendix Table 8: State HCBS Waiver Self-Direction and Provider Policy Choices, FY 2018
Appendix Table 9: Medicaid HCBS Waiver Waiting List Enrollment, by Target Population and by State, FY 2018
Appendix Table 10: Medicaid HCBS Waiver Waiting List Enrollment Change, FY 2017 to FY 2018
Appendix Table 11: Average Wait Time by Population for Medicaid HCBS Waivers with Waiting Lists, FY 2018
Appendix Table 12: State HCBS Waiver Utilization Control, Quality Measure, and Ombuds Policy Choices, FY 2018
Appendix Table 13: State Capitated MLTSS Policy Choices, FY 2018
Appendix Table 14: State Policy Choices About Electronic Visit Verification, FY 2018
Appendix Table 15: State Policy Choices About HCBS Settings Rule, FY 2018
Appendix Table 16: State Policy Choices About Direct Care Worker Minimum Wage and Overtime, FY 2018
Appendix Table 1: State Adoption of Medicaid HCBS by Authority, FY 2018
State
State Plan Services
Waivers
Home health
Personal care
Community First Choice
Section 1915 (i)
Section 1915 (c)
Section 1115*
Alabama
X
X
Alaska
X
X
X
Arizona
X
X
Arkansas
X
X
^
X
California
X
X
X
X
X
X
Colorado
X
X
X
Connecticut
X
X
X
X
Delaware
X
X
X
X
DC
X
X
X
X
Florida
X
X
X
Georgia
X
X
Hawaii
X
X
X
Idaho
X
X
X
X
Illinois
X
X
Indiana
X
X
X
Iowa
X
X
X
Kansas
X
X**
X
Kentucky
X
X
Louisiana
X
X
X
Maine
X
X
X
Maryland
X
X
X
X
Massachusetts
X
X
X
Michigan
X
X
^
X
Minnesota
X
X
X
Mississippi
X
X
X
Missouri
X
X
X
Montana
X
X
X
X
Nebraska
X
X
X
Nevada
X
X
X
X
New Hampshire
X
X
X
New Jersey
X
X
X
X
New Mexico
X
X**
X
X
New York
X
X
X
X
X
North Carolina
X
X
X
North Dakota
X
X
X
Ohio
X
X
X
Oklahoma
X
X
X
Oregon
X
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
X
X
Rhode Island
X
X
X
South Carolina
X
X
South Dakota
X
X
X
Tennessee
X
X
X
Texas
X
X
X
X
X
X
Utah
X
X
X
Vermont
X
X
X
Virginia
X
X
Washington
X
X
X
X
X
West Virginia
X
X
X
Wisconsin
X
X
X
Wyoming
X
X
TOTAL(51 states):
51 states
34 states
8 states
11 states
48 states
12 states
NOTES: *Includes states with § 1115 waivers without any accompanying § 1915 (c) waivers. **KS and NM deliver personal care state plan services through their Section 1115 capitated managed care waivers and do not separately report on state plan personal care enrollment, spending, or program policies. ^AR began covering § 1915 (i) services in March 2019, and MI began covering § 1915 (i) services in Oct. 2018.
Appendix Table 2: State Policy Choices About Medicaid Home Health State Plan Benefits, FY 2018
State
Optional Therapy Services^
Assistance with Household Activities
Self-Direction
Utilization Controls
Provider Reimbursement Rates(per visit, unless noted as per hour)
Copay
Cost Cap
Hour Cap
Agency
Registered Nurse
Home Health Aide
Alabama
X
X
$27.00
$27.00
$27.00
Alaska
X
X
$269.54
Arizona
X
X
X
$124.74
$105.69
$46.81
Arkansas
X
$145.02
$66.63
California
X
X
X
$1/visit
$74.86
$45.75
Colorado
X
X
$144.54
$ 146.92
$148.12
Connecticut
X
X*
$95.20
$ 6.16
Delaware
X
X*
NR
DC
X
X
$60.00
$90.00
$20.20/hr
Florida
X
X
$2/day
$31.04
$17.46
Georgia
X
X
$3/visit
$61.32
$61.32
$61.32
Hawaii
X
$124.00
Idaho
X
X*
$167.96
$58.91
Illinois
X
$72.00
$72.00
$72.00
Indiana
X
$ 231.00
Iowa
X
X*
$130.17
$121.33
$54.94
Kansas
X
$3/visit**
$50.00
$80.00
$40.50
Kentucky
X
$3/visit
$69.47
$87.15
$34.13
Louisiana
X
$147.20
Maine
X
X
$3/day
NR
Maryland
X
$115.46
$121.97
$60.59
Massachusetts
X
$89.21
$89.12/hr
$24.40/hr
Michigan
X
X*
$80.98
$51.72
Minnesota
X
X
$75.02
$57.57
Mississippi
X
X
$3/visit
$114.87
$ 106.14
$45.50
Missouri
X
X*
$78.32
$78.32
$78.32
Montana
X
X*
$4/visit
$76.41
$76.41
$34.12
Nebraska
X
X
X
$36.57/hr
$22.72/hr
Nevada
X
$68.88/hr
$32.85/hr
New Hampshire
X
$87.36/hr
$23.56/hr
New Jersey
X
X
X*
$42.96
$50.36
$39.31
New Mexico
X
X
$133.18
$151.05
$ 111.82
New York
X
X
NR
North Carolina
X
X
$99.86
$101.08
$44.82
North Dakota
X
$118.00
$35.00
$16.00
Ohio
X
X*
$47.40
$23.57
Oklahoma
X*
$182.25
Oregon
X
X
X
$ 193.63
$53.59
Pennsylvania
X
X*
$93.99
Rhode Island
X
X
X
$67.18
$67.18
$22.26
South Carolina
X
X*
$3.30/visit
$98.71
$93.69
$43.17
South Dakota
X
$59.60
$27.80
Tennessee
X
X*
NR
Texas
X
$3.14
$54.99
$46.09
Utah
X
NR
Vermont
X
X
$111.70
$50.60/hr
Virginia
X
X
$3/visit
$180.02
$73.90
Washington
X
X
$95.45
$63.50
$55.32
West Virginia
X
X
NR
Wisconsin
X
$85.54
$85.54
$40.31
Wyoming
X
X
X
$87.75
$45.50
TOTAL(51 states):
50 states
11 states
3 states
3 states
25 states
10 states
$102.85 average pay rate
$89.89 average pay rate
$46.80 average pay rate
NOTES: Blank cell indicates state does not elect policy option. NR indicates state did not respond to question. ^Optional therapy services include physical, occupational, and/or speech therapy. *State allows exceptions to hourly service cap. **KS’s $3 copay per skilled nursing visit only applies to fee-for-service enrollees (about 2% of the population) and not to capitated managed care enrollees. SOURCE: KFF Medicaid State Plan Home Health Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 3: State Policy Choices About Medicaid Personal Care State Plan Benefits, FY 2018
State
Service Site, Besides Home
Self-Dir.
Provider Type
Utilization Controls
Provider Reimb. Rate(per hr.)
Work
Other Comm. Setting
Agency
Indep.
Cost Cap
Hour Cap
Agency
Provider
Alaska
X
X
X
X
X*
$24.40
Arkansas
X
X
X
X
$18.00
California
X
X
X*
X
$11.25
Colorado
X
X
X
`
$60.66
$60.66
DC
X
X
X
X
$20.08
$13.84
Florida
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
$15.00
$15.00
Idaho
X
X
X
X
X
$15.76
Kansas
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
Louisiana
X
X
X*
X
$11.40
Maine
X
X
X
$20.12
Maryland
X
X
X
$16.99
Massachusetts
X
X
X
X
X
$15.00
Michigan
X
X
X
X
X
$14.50
$9.25
Minnesota
X
X
X
X
X*
X
$17.40
Missouri
X
X
X
X
$18.12
$15.76
Montana
X
X
X
X
$19.44
Nebraska
X
X
X
X
X
$9.20
$9.20
Nevada
X
X
X
X
X
$17.00
$17.00
New Hampshire
X
X
X
NR
NR
New Jersey
X
X
X
X
X
X
$15.00
$15.00
New Mexico
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
New York
X
X
X
X
NR
NR
North Carolina
X
X
$15.60
North Dakota
X
X
X
X
X
$27.96
$20.36
Oklahoma
X
X
X
X
NR
NR
Oregon
X
X*
X
$24.61
$14.65
Rhode Island
X
X
X
NR
NR
South Dakota
X
X
X
X
$25.24
Texas
X
X
X
X
X
$12.44
$12.44
Utah
X
X
X
X
$19.08
$11.64
Vermont
X
X
X
X
X
N/A
N/A
Washington
X
X
X
X
X
$26.86
$17.91
West Virginia
X
X
X
X
$16.00
Wisconsin
X
X
$16.72
TOTAL(34 states):
25 states
23 states
20 states
29 states
16 states
2 states
20 states
$19.90 aver.
$17.26 aver.
No Personal Care Program (17 states)
Alabama
Arizona
Connecticut
Delaware
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kentucky
Mississippi
Ohio
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Tennessee
Virginia
Wyoming
NOTES: NR = no response. Blank cell = state does not elect policy option. N/A = VT’s program is entirely self-directed, with enrollees setting payment rates, subject to a state-established minimum. *State allows legally responsible relative to be paid provider.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid State Plan Personal Care Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 4: Section 1915 (i) State Plan Services by State and Target Population , FY 2018
Target Population
Service Category
Case Management
Home-based Services
Day Services
Nursing/Therapy Services
Round-the-Clock Services
Supported Employment
Other Mental/Behavioral Health Services
Equipment/Technology/Modifications
I/DD(4 states)
2 states(DE, MS)
3 states(CA, DE, ID^)
3 states(CA, ID^, MS)
1 state(CA)
1 state(CA)
3 states(CA, DE, MS)
2 states(CA, ID^)
2 states(CA, DE)
Seniors and/or Physical Disabilities(2 of 3 states responding*)
2 states(CT, NV)
2 states(CT, NV)
2 states(CT, NV)
1 state(NV)
2 states(CT, NV)
1 state(NV)
1 state(NV)
1 state(CT)
Mental Illness(4 states)
3 states(IN^, IA, TX)
3 states(IN^, IA, ,TX)
2 states(IN^, IA)
2 states(IN^, TX)
1 state(IA)
2 states(IA, TX)
3 states(IN^, OH, TX)
1 state(TX)
TOTAL(10 of 11 states responding*):
7 states
8 states
7 states
4 states
4 states
6 states
6 states
4 states
NOTES: Section 1915 (i) states include CA, CT, DE, DC, IA, ID, IN, OH, MS, NV, and TX. *DC did not respond to this survey question. ^ID and IN benefit packages vary by sub-population.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 5: Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waivers by State and Target Population, FY 2018
State
Total Number of Waivers
Population Served
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors &AdultswithPhysicalDisabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep. Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
6
X
X
X
Alaska
4
X
X
X
Arkansas
4
X
X
California
7
X
X
X
X
X
X
Colorado
11
X
X
X
X
X
Connecticut
11
X
X
X
X
X
X
Delaware
1
X
DC
2
X
X
Florida
4
X
X
X
Georgia
4
X
X
X
Hawaii
1
X
Idaho
4
X
X
Illinois
9
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Indiana
4
X
X
X
Iowa
7
X
X
X
X
X
X
Kansas
7
X
X
X
X
X
X
Kentucky
6
X
X
X
X
Louisiana
7
X
X
X
Maine
5
X
X
X
Maryland
6
X
X
X
X
Massachusetts
10
X
X
X
Michigan
4
X
X
X
Minnesota
5
X
X
X
X
X
Mississippi
5
X
X
X
X
Missouri
9
X
X
X
X
Montana
4
X
X
X
Nebraska
5
X
X
X
Nevada
3
X
X
X
New Hampshire
4
X
X
X
New Jersey
1
X
New Mexico
3
X
New York
9
X
X
X
X
X
North Carolina
3
X
X
X
North Dakota
6
X
X
X
X
Ohio
7
X
X
X
Oklahoma
6
X
X
X
Oregon
6
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
10
X
X
X
X
South Carolina
7
X
X
X
X
X
X
South Dakota
4
X
X
X
Tennessee
3
X
Texas
6
X
X
X
Utah
8
X
X
X
X
X
X
Virginia
5
X
X
Washington
8
X
X
X
West Virginia
3
X
X
X
Wisconsin
6
X
X
Wyoming
5
X
X
X
X
TOTAL(48 states):
265 waivers
48 states
8 states
37 states
16 states
18 states
5 states
11 states
21 states
No Section 1915 (c) Waivers (3 states)
Arizona
Rhode Island
Vermont
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. States may offer more than one Section 1915 (c) waiver per target population category. Other states may serve these populations through Section 1115 waivers.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 6: Section 1115 HCBS Waivers by State and Target Population, FY 2018
State
Total Number of Waivers
Population Served
I/DD
Seniors
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep.Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
TBI/SCI
Arizona
1
X
X
X
California
1
X
X
Delaware
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
Hawaii
1
X
X
X
X
New Jersey
1
X
X
New Mexico
1
X
X
New York
1
X
X
X
Rhode Island
1
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Tennessee
1
X
X
X
Texas
1
X
X
Vermont
1
X
X
X
X
X
Washington
1
X
X
X
X
X
TOTAL(12 states):
12 states
5 states
12 states
12 states
2 states
3 states
3 states
4 states
4 states
No Stand-Alone Section 1115 HCBS Waivers (39 states)
Alabama
Alaska
Arkansas
Colorado
Connecticut
DC
Florida
Georgia
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas**
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan*
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
North Carolina**
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
South Dakota
Utah
Virginia
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Other states serve these populations through Section 1915 (c) waivers. *MI has a § 1115 waiver for behavioral health services approved in April 2019. **KS and NC have joint § 1115/1915 (c) waivers.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 7: State Financial Eligibility Criteria for Medicaid HCBS Waivers by Target Population, FY 2018
State
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adultswith Physical Disabilities
Adults withPhysical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep.Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
300%
300%
300%
300%
Alaska
300%
300%
300%
Arizona
300%
300%
Arkansas
300%
300%
California
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
Colorado
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
Connecticut
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
Delaware
250%
250%
250%
250%
250%
250%
250%
DC
300%
300%
Florida
300%
300%
300%
Georgia
300%
300%
300%
Hawaii
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
Idaho
300%
300%
Illinois
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
Indiana
300%
300%
300%
Iowa
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
Kansas
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
Kentucky
300%
300%
300%
300%
Louisiana
300%
300%
300%
Maine
300%
300%
300%
Maryland
300%
300%
300%
300%
Massachusetts
300%
300%
300%
Michigan
100% FPL
300%
300%
Minnesota
100% FPL
300%
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
Mississippi
300%
300%
300%
300%
Missouri
300%
170%
300%
300%
Montana
100%
100%
100%
Nebraska
100%
100% FPL
100% FPL
Nevada
300%
300%
300%
New Hampshire
300%
300%
300%
New Jersey
300%
300%
New Mexico
300%
300%
300%
New York
300% FPL
84% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
North Carolina
100% FPL
100%
100%
North Dakota
83% FPL
83% FPL
83% FPL
83% FPL
Ohio
300%
300%
300%
Oklahoma
300%
300%
300%
Oregon
300%
300%
300%
Pennsylvania
300%
300%
300%
300%
Rhode Island
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
100% FPL
South Carolina
100% FPL
300%
300%
300%
300%
300%
South Dakota
300%
300%
300%
Tennessee
300%
300%
300%
300%
Texas
300%
300%
300%
300%
Utah
100% FPL
100% FPL
300%
300%
100% FPL
100% FPL
Vermont
300%
300%
300%
Virginia
300%
300%
Washington
300%
300%
300%
300%
West Virginia
300%
300%
300%
Wisconsin
300%
300%
Wyoming
300%
300%
300%
300%
NOTES: Eligibility Limit as a % of SSI, unless otherwise noted. I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Data include § 1915 (c) and § 1115 waivers. States may offer more than one § 1915 (c) waiver per target population category. Blank cell indicates state does not cover that population.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 8: State HCBS Waiver Self-Direction and Provider Policy Choices, FY 2018
State
Self-Direction Allowed
Scope of Self-Direction
Direct Care Provider Types
Select/Dismiss Worker
Set Worker Schedule
Set Worker Pay
Allocate Service Budget
Agency
Indep. Providers
Legally Responsible Relative
Alabama
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Alaska
X
X
X
Arizona
X
X
X
X
X
X
Arkansas
X*
X
X
X
X
X
California
X
X
X
X
X
Colorado
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Connecticut
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Delaware
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
DC
X
X
X
X
X
X
Florida
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Georgia
X
X
X
X
X
X
Hawaii
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Idaho
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Illinois
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Indiana
X
X
X
X
X
X
Iowa
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Kansas
X
X
X
X
X
X
Kentucky
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Louisiana
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Maine
X
X
X
X
X
X
Maryland
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Massachusetts
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Michigan
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Minnesota
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Mississippi
X
X
X
X
X
Missouri
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Montana
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Nebraska
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Nevada
X
X
X
X
X
New Hampshire
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
New Jersey
X
X
X
X
X
X
New Mexico
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
New York
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
North Carolina
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
North Dakota
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Ohio
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Oklahoma
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Oregon
X
X
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Rhode Island
X
X
X
X
X
X
South Carolina
X
X
X
X
X
South Dakota
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Tennessee
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Texas
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Utah
X
X
X
X
X
X
Vermont
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Virginia
X
X
X
X
X
Washington
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
West Virginia
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Wisconsin
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Wyoming
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
TOTAL(51 states):
50 states
50 states
50 states
39 states
33 states
51 states
49 states
30 states
NOTES: HCBS waivers include § 1915 (c) and § 1115. Some states may apply different self-direction policies to agency-employed vs. independent providers. *AR does not offer self-direction as a waiver service, but waiver enrollees can self-direct attendant services provided under a waiver through § 1915 (j) authority.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 9: Medicaid HCBS Waiver Waiting List Enrollment, by Target Population and by State, FY 2018
State
Waiting List Enrollment by Target Population
Total Waiting List Enrollment:
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adults with Physical Disabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep. Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
2,500
5,080
213
7,793
Alaska
906
0
0
906
Arizona
0
0
0
Arkansas
2,869
234
3,103
California*
0
1,539
3,295
3,600
0
76
8,510
Colorado
2,800
0
0
0
0
2,800
Connecticut
1,865
0
1,600
280
65
74
3,884
Delaware
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
DC*
0
0
0
Florida
21,864
49,798*
0
71,662
Georgia
5,939
820
0
6,759
Hawaii
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Idaho
0
0
0
Illinois*
19,354
0
0
0
0
0
0
19,354
Indiana
1,495
0
19
1,514
Iowa
1,802
2,860
0
688
1,224
6,574
Kansas
3,673
0
1,557
0
0
0
5,230
Kentucky
9,055
0
0
139
9,194
Louisiana
27,509*
36,743
666
64,918
Maine
1,515*
0
0
1,515
Maryland
10,709
20,500
158
0
31,367
Massachusetts
0
0
0
0
Michigan
0
3,021
0
3,021
Minnesota
31
0
0
0
0
31
Mississippi
1,794
10,224
1,411
81
13,510
Missouri
0
0
100
0
100
Montana
1,810
233
79
2,122
Nebraska
1,627
0
0
1,627
Nevada
378
566
215
1,159
New Hampshire
105
0
0
105
New Jersey
NR
0
0
New Mexico
5,030
15,325
20,355
New York
0
NR
0
unknown
NR
unknown
North Carolina
11,000
3,397
0
14,397
North Dakota
17
0
0
0
17
Ohio*
68,644
0
0
68,644
Oklahoma
7,672
0
0
7,672
Oregon
39
0
143
182
Pennsylvania
16,532
0
0
0
16,532
Rhode Island
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
South Carolina
11,292
0
0
0
0
0
11,292
South Dakota*
350
0
0
350
Tennessee
7,263
0
7,263
Texas
323,434
35,224
26,550
0
385,208
Utah
2,857
253
0
35
82
108
3,335
Vermont
0
0
0
0
Virginia
13,215
0
13,215
Washington
0
0
0
0
0
West Virginia
1,200
30
6
1,236
Wisconsin
1,516
1,635
3,151
Wyoming
279
0
0
0
279
TOTAL:
589,940
2,358
185,774
11,376
27,213
76
1,498
1,651
819,886
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Data include § 1915 (c) and § 1115 HCBS waivers. States may offer more than one § 1915 (c) waiver per target population category. NR indicates state did not respond to question. Blank cell indicates state does not have a waiver serving this population. *CA data include § 1915 (c) waivers only; CA did not report waiver waiting list enrollment for its § 1115 waiver for seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Data are for FY 2018 with the exception of DC, FL (seniors/physical disabilities only), IL, LA (I/DD only), ME (I/DD only), OH, and SD where FY 2017 data are reported.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 10: Medicaid HCBS Waiver Waiting List Enrollment Change, FY 2017 to FY 2018
State
FY 2017
FY 2018
Percent Change
Alabama
4,194
7,793
86%
Alaska
629
906
44%
Arizona
0
0
N/A
Arkansas
2,834
3,103
9%
California
7,683**
8,510
11%
Colorado
3,115
2,800
-10%
Connecticut
5,001
3,884
-22%
Delaware
0
0
N/A
DC
0
0*
N/A
Florida
71,016
71,662*
1%
Georgia
7,810
6,759
-13%
Hawaii
0
0
N/A
Idaho
0
0
N/A
Illinois
19,354
19,354*
N/A
Indiana
1,404
1,514
8%
Iowa
8,004
6,574
-18%
Kansas
4,484
5,230
17%
Kentucky
6,091
9,194
51%
Louisiana
65,989
64,918*
-2%
Maine
1,515
1,515*
N/A
Maryland
35,143
31,367
-11%
Massachusetts
0
0
N/A
Michigan
3,223
3,021
-6%
Minnesota
237
31
-87%
Mississippi
13,465
13,510
0%
Missouri
0
100
N/A
Montana
2,156
2,122
-2%
Nebraska
3,142
1,627
-48%
Nevada
1,173
1,159
-1%
New Hampshire
105
105
0%
New Jersey
0
0
N/A
New Mexico
17,862
20,355
14%
New York
unknown
unknown
N/A
North Carolina
14,487
14,397
-1%
North Dakota
11
17
55%
Ohio
68,644
68,644*
N/A
Oklahoma
7,701
7,672
0%
Oregon
110
182
65%
Pennsylvania
9,504
16,532
74%
Rhode Island
0
0
N/A
South Carolina
10,409
11,292
8%
South Dakota
350
350*
N/A
Tennessee
7,428
7,263
-2%
Texas
281,381
385,208
37%
Utah
2,974
3,335
12%
Vermont
0
0
N/A
Virginia
12,266
13,215
8%
Washington
0
0
N/A
West Virginia
2,092
1,236
-41%
Wisconsin
4,198
3,151
-25%
Wyoming
194
279
44%
TOTAL:
707,378
819,886
16%
NOTES: Data include § 1915 (c) and § 1115 HCBS waivers. States with zero waitlist or unknown waitlist in FY 2017, and states that report full FY 2017 data in FY 2018 column are noted with N/A in percent change column. *FY 2017 data is used for DC, FL (seniors/physical disabilities only), IL, LA (I/DD only), ME (I/DD only), OH, and SD. **CA data include § 1915 (c) waivers only.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Program Survey, FY 2017 and FY 2018.
Appendix Table 11: Average Wait Time by Population for Medicaid HCBS Waivers with Waiting Lists, FY 2018*
Target Population:
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adults with Physical Disabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep.Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
All Populations
Average Number of Months Waiting:
71
28
35
25
29
1
8
27
39
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Data include § 1915 (c) and § 1115 waivers. *Of the 41 states reporting one or more waivers with a waiting list in 2018, 30 states reported average wait time for at least one waiver with a waiting list (AL, AK, CA, CO, CT, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NM, NC, ND, NV, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, WV, and WY), and 11 states (AR, FL, GA, IL, ME, NH, NY, OH, UT, VA, and WI) did not report average wait time for any waivers with waiting lists.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Waiver Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 12: State HCBS Waiver Utilization Control, Quality Measure and Ombuds Policy Choices, FY 2018
State
Utilization Controls
Quality Measures
Ombuds Programs Operated By:
Cost Cap
Hour Cap
Geo. Limit
Quality of Life
Community Integration
LTSS Rebalancing
State Gov’t
Community-based Agency
Another Entity
Alabama
X
X
X
X
Alaska
X
X
X
Arizona
X
X
X
Arkansas
X
X
X
California
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Colorado
X
X
X
X
X
Connecticut
X
X
X
X
X
Delaware
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
DC
X
X
X
Florida
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Georgia
X*
X
X
X
Hawaii
X
X
X
X
X
Idaho
X
X
X
X
Illinois
X*
X
X
X
Indiana
X
X
X
X
X
X
Iowa
X*
X
X
X
X
Kansas
X
X
X
X
Kentucky
X*
X*
X
X
X
Louisiana
X*
X
X
X
X
X
Maine
X
X
X
X
NR
Maryland
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Massachusetts
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Michigan
X
X
X
Minnesota
X*
X
X
X
X
Mississippi
X
X
X
Missouri
X*
X*
Montana
X*
X*
X
X
Nebraska
X
X
X
Nevada
X
X
X
X
New Hampshire
X*
X
X
X
X
New Jersey
X
X
NR
New Mexico
X*
X
X
X
New York
X*
X*
X
X
X
North Carolina
X
X*
X
North Dakota
X
X*
X
Ohio
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Oklahoma
X*
X
X
Oregon
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
X
X
X
X
Rhode Island
X
X
South Carolina
X*
X
X
X
South Dakota
X*
X*
X
X
X
Tennessee
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
X
Texas
X*
X*
X
X
X
X
Utah
X
X
X
Vermont
X*
X
X
X
Virginia
X
X
X
X
Washington
X*
X
X
X
X
West Virginia
X
X
X
X
Wisconsin
X
X
X
X
X
Wyoming
X*
X
X
X
TOTAL(51 states):
34 states
20 states
4 states
46 states
44 states
25 states
36 states
4 states
5 states
NOTE: HCBS waivers include § 1915 (c) and § 1115. Blank cell indicates state does not adopt policy. NR indicates state did not respond to question. * indicates state allows exception to cost/hour cap.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 13: State Capitated MLTSS Policy Choices, FY 2018
State
Financial Incentives for HCBS Instead of Institutional Services^
Value-Based Payment for HCBS
Independent Enrollment Options Counseling
Disenrollment if LTSS Provider Leaves Plan Network
Stakeholder Advisory Committee
Use Now
Future Plan to Use/Expand
State-Level
Health Plan Level
Arizona
X
X
X
X
Arkansas*
NR
X
NR
X
X
X
California
X
X
X
X
X
Delaware
X
X
X
X
X
X
Florida
X
X
X
X
X
Hawaii
X
X
X
X
Idaho
NR
X
X
X
X
Illinois
NR
NR
X
X
X
Iowa
X
X
X
X
X
X
Kansas
X
NR
X
X
X
X
Louisiana
NR
X
X
X
Massachusetts
NR
NR
Michigan
X
X
X
X
Minnesota
X
NR
X
X
X
New Jersey
NR
X
X
X
X
New Mexico
X
X
X
X
X
X
New York
X
X
X
X
X
X
North Carolina
NR
NR
NR
X
Ohio
X
NR
X
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
X
X
X
X
X
X
Rhode Island
NR
NR
X
X
X
South Carolina
X
NR
X
X
X
X
Tennessee
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Texas
NR
X
X
X
X
X
Virginia
X
X
X
X
Wisconsin
X
X
X
X
X
X
TOTAL(26 states):
14 states
7 states
10 states
19 states
20 states
23 states
22 states
No MLTSS Program in FY 2018 (25 states):
Alabama
Alaska
Colorado
Connecticut
DC
Georgia
Indiana
Kentucky
Maine
Maryland
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
North Dakota
Oklahoma
Oregon
South Dakota
Utah
Vermont**
Washington
West Virginia
Wyoming
NOTES: NR indicates state did not respond to question. Blank cell indicates state does not adopt policy. *The capitated portion of AR’s program began in FY 2019. **VT has a non-risk based MLTSS program as of Sept. 2017. ^FL and SC offer transition bonus payments, CA did not specify incentive type, all other states offer blended rates.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 14: State Policy Choices About Electronic Visit Verification (EVV), FY 2018
State
EVV for Personal Care Services^
EVV for Home Health State Plan Services
In place in FY 2018^
In place by January 2020^
Plans to request good faith exemption^
EVV Model Vendor Type
In place in FY 2018
In place by year
EVV Model Vendor Type
Alabama
X^
X*
State mandated external
2023
Undecided
Alaska
X*
Open
Unknown
Undecided
Arizona
X
Open
2020
Open vendor
Arkansas
X^
Other
NR
Other
California
X
Undecided
NR
NR
Colorado
X
X*
Other
2020
Other
Connecticut
X
X
X*
State mandated external
2023
State mandated external
Delaware
X
Open
2020
Open vendor
DC
X*
NR
NR
NR
Florida
X
X
State mandated external
X
State mandated external
Georgia
X
Open
2023
Open
Hawaii
X
Open
2020
Open
Idaho
X
Other
Unknown
Other
Illinois
NR
NR
Undecided
2023
Undecided
Indiana
X
X
Open
2023
Open
Iowa
X*
Undecided
2023
Undecided
Kansas
X
State mandated external
Unknown
State mandated external
Kentucky
X
X*
Open
2020
State mandated external
Louisiana
X^
Other
2023
State mandated in-house
Maine
X^
X*
Provider choice
2019
Provider choice
Maryland
X
X
State mandated external
2023
Other
Massachusetts
X
Other
2023
Other
Michigan
X
Open
2023
Open
Minnesota
X
Open
Unknown
Open
Mississippi
X
X
Other
Unknown
NR
Missouri
X
X
X*
Provider choice
2020
Provider choice
Montana
X
Other
2023
Other
Nebraska
X
X
Open
2021
Open
Nevada
X^
Other
2023
Open
New Hampshire
X
X
Provider choice
NR
Provider choice
New Jersey
X
State mandated external
2022
State mandated external
New Mexico
X^
X
X
Other
2023
Other
New York
X
X
Undecided
NR
NR
North Carolina
X
Open
2023
Open
North Dakota
X
Open
2021
Provider choice
Ohio
X
X
X
Open**
X
Open
Oklahoma
X
X
Other
X
Open
Oregon
X
Open
Unknown
NR
Pennsylvania
X
Open
2023
Open vendor
Rhode Island
X^
X*
Provider choice
X
Provider choice
South Carolina
X
X
Other
2022
Open
South Dakota
X^
Open
2019
Open
Tennessee
X
X
Other
2023
Other
Texas
X
X
X*
Other
2023
Other
Utah
Provider choice
Unknown
Provider choice
Vermont
X^
X
Open
2023
Open
Virginia
X
Open
2023
Provider choice
Washington
X^
X
Provider choice
Unknown
NR
West Virginia
X
X^
X*
Other
Unknown
Other
Wisconsin
X*
Other
2023
Other
Wyoming
X
State mandated external
2023
State mandated external
TOTAL(51 states):
16 states
27 states
35 states
4 states
NOTES: ^Personal care includes services delivered under the state plan option and HCBS waivers. AL, LA, NM, and RI have implemented EVV for all personal care services across all authorities, and AR, ME, NV, SD, VT, WA, and WV plan to do so by 2020; other states’ implementation dates and exemption plans apply to some but not all personal care authorities. *As of Feb. 2020, 13 states have received approval for a good faith exemption. **OH reported open vendor except that managed care plans must use the state vendor.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 15: State Policy Choices About HCBS Settings Rule, FY 2018
State
State Rule/Policy Changed or Must Change
Settings Must Be Modified
Settings Cannot Be Modified
Settings Presumed Institutional Because Effectively Isolate Beneficiaries
Plans To Submit Or Has Submitted Information to Overcome Institutional Presumption
Alabama
X
X (1)
Alaska
X
X (613)
X (12)
Arizona
X
X (4)
X (5)
Arkansas
X
NR
NR
NR
NR
California
X
Colorado
X
X (TBD)
X (TBD)
X (TBD)
Connecticut
X
X (43)
X
X
Delaware
X
X (460)
X (1)
X (1)
DC
X
X
Florida
X
X (TBD)
X (1)
X (TBD)
X (TBD)
Georgia
X
X
Hawaii
X
X (1,760)
X (11)
Idaho
X
X (47)
X (3)
X
X
Illinois
X
X
X
Indiana
X
X (1,010)
Iowa
X
X (218)
X (2)
X (52)
X (45)
Kansas
X
Kentucky
X
X (404)
X
X (95)
X (95)
Louisiana
X
X (90)
Maine
Maryland
X (26)
X (2)
X (17)
X (17)
Massachusetts
NR
Michigan
X
X (1,479)
X (1,138)
Minnesota
X
X (51)
X (135)
X (265)
Mississippi
X
Missouri
X
X (241)
X (15)
X (127)
X
Montana
X
X
X
Nebraska
X
X (255)
X (2)
X
Nevada
X
X
X
X (3)
New Hampshire
X
X (1,984)
X
X (64)
X (54)
New Jersey
X
New Mexico
X
New York
X
X (311)
X
X
North Carolina
X
X
X (20)
North Dakota
X
X (108)
X (6)
X (6)
Ohio
X
X (397)
X (4)
X (69)
Oklahoma
X
X (21)
X (4)
Oregon
X
X (1,678)
X
X (7)
X (16)
Pennsylvania
X
X
X
Rhode Island
X
X (14)
X
South Carolina
X
X (1,321)
X (3)
X (2)
South Dakota
X
X (70)
X (14)
X (26)
Tennessee
X
X
X
X
X
Texas
Utah
X
X
X
X
Vermont
X
Virginia
X
Washington
X
X (8)
X (1)
X (1)
West Virginia
X
X (100)
X (100)
Wisconsin
X
X
X
X (TBD)
Wyoming
X
X (2)
X (2)
TOTAL(51 states):
47 states
39 states
20 states
26 states
22 states
NOTES: NR indicates state did not respond to question. Numbers in parentheses indicate number of settings. TBD indicates number of settings to be determined.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Survey, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 16: State Policy Choices About Direct Care Worker Minimum Wage and Overtime, FY 2018
State
Restrict Worker Hours or Other Policy Change (new in FY 2018 or continued from prior year)
Limit Worker Hours to 40 hours/week (new in FY 2018 or continued from prior year)
Budget State Funds for Worker Overtime Pay in 2019
Budget State Funds for Worker Travel Time Pay in 2019
Alabama
X
X
Alaska
Arizona
X
X
Arkansas
California
X
X
X
Colorado
Connecticut
X
X
X
Delaware
X
X
DC
Florida
Georgia
X
X
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
X
X
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
X
X
Kentucky
X
X
Louisiana
X
Maine
Maryland
X
X
Massachusetts
X
X
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
X
X
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
X
X
Nevada
X
X
New Hampshire
X
New Jersey
X
New Mexico
X
X
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
X
X
Ohio
X
X
X
Oklahoma
X
X
Oregon
X
X
X
X
Pennsylvania
X
Rhode Island
South Carolina
X
X
South Dakota
Tennessee
X
Texas
Utah
X
Vermont
X
X
X
Virginia
X
X
Washington
X
X
X
X
West Virginia
Wisconsin
X
X
X
Wyoming
X
X
TOTAL(51 states):
21 states
14 states
17 states
13 states
SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2016-2018.
Self-direction in NE does not include determining worker payment rates or allocating service budgets. ↩︎
The remaining 10 states (AZ, CA, DC, FL, MS, NC, OR, VA, WA and WY) did not respond to this question. ↩︎
Federal law exempts the following populations from most Medicaid cost-sharing: children under age 18, most pregnant women with incomes <150% FPL, individuals who are terminally ill, those residing in an institution, American Indians who either are eligible to receive or have received an item or service furnished by an Indian health care provider or through referral to contract services, and individuals covered under the breast and cervical cancer treatment program. KFF, Premiums and Cost-Sharing in Medicaid (Feb. 2013), https://modern.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/premiums-and-cost-sharing-in-medicaid/. ↩︎
SC charges $3.30 per visit, while GA, KS, KY, ME, MS, and VA charge $3.00. ↩︎
AZ, CA, DE, DC, FL, HI, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MA, MN, MS, NE, NH, NM, NV, NJ, NY, OH, OR, PA, RI, TN, TX, UT, WA, WV, and WI. ↩︎
The remaining states (CA, DC, MN and MS) did not specify a managed care authority. ↩︎
This year’s survey changed the way this question was asked. In previous years, we asked states to report a minimum, maximum, and an average dollar rate paid to agencies, registered nurses, and home health aides. An average was calculated based on state responses. This year’s survey asked states to report only the average dollar rate per visit to agencies, registered nurses, and home health aides. A total of 45 states responded to some or all of this survey question. The six states not responding include DE, ME, NY, TN, UT, and WV. ↩︎
The average includes 33 states that reported per visit rates, and four states that reported per hour rates. ↩︎
The average includes 33 states that reported per visit rates, and six states that reported per hour rates. ↩︎
In past years, DE did not separately report personal care enrollment and spending or complete the policy survey, as those services were included in its Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver. ↩︎
KS and NM have CMS approval to offer personal care state plan services but deliver these services through Section 1115 capitated managed care waivers. These states did not separately report personal care state plan enrollment and spending and did not complete the policy survey. ↩︎
This can include training on topics such as safety, transportation, shopping, social skills, and banking, as well as mentoring and parent education and training. ↩︎
AK allows parents who are court-appointed to provide personal care services. ↩︎
LA allows family members and friends other than a spouse, curator, tutor, legal guardian, responsible representative or power of attorney to provide long-term personal care services to a beneficiary over age 21 if the family member/friend is employed by an agency. ↩︎
This year’s survey changed the way this question was asked. In previous years, we asked states to report a minimum, maximum, and an average dollar rate paid to personal care agencies, and an average was calculated based on state responses. This year’s survey asked states to report only the average dollar rate per visit to agencies. 27 of 34 states responded to some or all of this survey question, with 25 responding with agency rates and 15 with direct provider rates. Six states (KS, NH, NM, NY, OK, and RI) did not respond to this survey question, while one state (VT) noted this question was not applicable since its personal care program is entirely self-directed with beneficiaries establishing provider payment rates, subject to a state minimum. ↩︎
This option specifically applies to the 217 HCBS waiver group, individuals for whom the state has opted to expand the minimum Medicaid HCBS financial eligibility limit under the “special income rule” (up to a federal maximum of 300% SSI), who would be eligible under the Medicaid state plan if institutionalized, meet an institutional level of care, and would be institutionalized if not receiving waiver services. These individuals must be receiving at least one waiver service per month to qualify for CFC services. ↩︎
CFC services include hands-on assistance, supervision or cueing, and services for the acquisition, maintenance, and enhancement of skills necessary for individuals to accomplish self-care, household activity, and health-related tasks. Health-related tasks are those that can be delegated by a licensed health care professional to be performed by an attendant. ↩︎
Backup systems include electronic devices as well as individuals identified by the beneficiary to ensure continuity of services. ↩︎
Transition costs may include rent and utility deposits, first month’s rent and utilities, bedding, basic kitchen supplies, and other required necessities. ↩︎
These services may be covered to the extent that expenditures otherwise would be made for human assistance. ↩︎
The remaining state (NY) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
ID targets people with I/DD but offers different benefit packages for children vs. adults. IN targets 3 groups of people with mental illness: children, adults receiving habilitation services, and people receiving behavioral health and primary care coordination. NV serves seniors and people with physical disabilities, those with traumatic brain injuries, and those with “behavioral indicators,” but did not separate data by sub-population. ↩︎
Benefits under IN’s Section 1915 (i) behavioral health and primary care coordination program are limited to case management. IN does not expand financial eligibility for its other two Section 1915 (i) programs, which provide wrap-around benefits for children with mental health disabilities and habilitation services for adults with mental health disabilities. ↩︎
These 12 states operate Section 1115 waivers without an accompanying Section 1915 (c) waiver. KS and NC are excluded from this list because they have joint Section 1115/1915 (c) waivers, with HCBS authorized under Section 1915 (c). ↩︎
WA’s Section 1115 waiver includes 3 HCBS programs provided fee-for-service: (1) the Medicaid Alternative Care program, which offers a benefit package to support unpaid caregivers as an alternative to Medicaid-funded LTSS for people age 55 and older who are otherwise Medicaid eligible; (2) the Tailored Support for Older Adults programs, which creates a new eligibility pathway and provides a limited benefit package to people who are 55 and older and meet a nursing home level of care but do not currently financially qualify for Medicaid (this pathway covers people with income up to 300% SSI and resources up to $53,100); and (3) Foundational Community Supports, which provides (a) supported housing to those 18 or older with at least 1 health need (covering a range of behavioral health, physical health, and intellectual disabilities) and at least 1 risk factor (such as homelessness, frequent institutional stays, or frequent in-home caregiver turnover), and (b) supported employment to those age 16 or older with at least 1 health need (including behavioral health, physical health, and intellectual disabilities) and at least 1 risk factor (such as unable to obtain or maintain employment due to a disability (including TBI), multiple SUD inpatient treatment visits, or risk for deterioration of behavioral health condition). CMS, Special Terms and Conditions, Washington State Medicaid Transformation Project, #11-W-00304/0 (approved Jan. 9, 2017-Dec. 31, 2021), https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Waivers/1115/downloads/wa/wa-medicaid-transformation-ca.pdf. ↩︎
Other Medicaid managed care authorities include the Section 1932 state plan option and Section 1915 (a) and Section 1915 (b) waivers. ↩︎
KS’s Section 1115 waiver authorizing capitated managed care was originally approved in January 2013. It operates concurrently with its Section 1915 (c) waivers for people with I/DD (KS-0224), children with autism (KS-0476), people with physical disabilities (KS-0304), medically fragile/technology dependent children (KS-4165), people with TBI (KS-4164), children with serious emotional disturbance (KS-0320), and frail seniors (KS-0303). CMS Special Terms and Conditions for KanCare, #11-W-00283/7 at ¶ 42 (p. 41) (approval period Jan. 2019-Dec. 2023), https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Waivers/1115/downloads/ks/ks-kancare-ca.pdf. ↩︎
NC’s Section 1115 waiver was approved in October 2018, but implementation has been delayed. In the meantime, NC’s joint § 1915 (b)/(c) MLTSS waiver continues. The letter accompanying CMS’s October 2018 approval of NC’s Section 1115 waiver notes that “[t]he state requested to transition its 1915 (c) Home and community Based services (HCBS) waivers for Innovation Waiver Services [for children and adults with I/DD] (NC-0423.R02.00) and Traumatic Brain Injury services (NC-1326.R00.00) into the demonstration. CMS determined the state could effectively operate its HCBS waivers under the 1915 (c) authorities concurrently with 1115 authority requiring Medicaid beneficiaries, except those excluded or exempted, to enroll into a managed care plan to receive state plan and HCBS waiver services.” Letter from CMS Administrator Seema Verma to NC Deputy Secretary for Medical Assistance Dave Richard, at 3 (Oct. 19, 2018), https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Waivers/1115/downloads/nc/nc-medicaid-reform-ca.pdf. ↩︎
Most of the decline in the total number of Section 1915 (c) waivers from FY 2017 to FY 2018 is attributable to states consolidating multiple waivers in an effort to streamline administration and reporting. For example, several states eliminated one or more Section 1915 (c) waivers but transferred those populations and services to another Section 1915 (c) waiver: FL moved three waivers serving individuals with HIV, individuals with TBI/SCI, and individuals with I/DD into its long-term care waiver, NE eliminated one waiver serving people with I/DD and transitioned another I/DD waiver into the state’s comprehensive HCBS waiver, NY continued to combine multiple waivers serving different groups of children with disabilities into a single children’s waiver, effective April 2019, PA moved five waivers to a Section 1915 (c) that operates concurrently with a Section 1915 (b) waiver to provide managed LTSS, WI moved two waivers serving individuals with I/DD and seniors and adults with physical disabilities to other existing HCBS waivers (Family Care or self-directed program), and WY transferred its TBI/SCI waiver enrollees to other existing HCBS waivers. In addition, CO and CT discontinued waivers serving individuals with I/DD and moved those services to state plan authority. VA was the only state to report eliminating a waiver (serving seniors and people with physical disabilities, specifically with Alzheimer’s disease or related dementia) without moving those services to another authority. ↩︎
For the I/DD population, 46 states use only Section 1915 (c) waivers, three states (AZ, RI, and VT) use only Section 1115 waivers, and 2 states (NY and TN) use both waiver authorities. ↩︎
For seniors and adults with physical disabilities, 39 states use only Section 1915 (c) waivers, nine states (AZ, DE, HI, NJ, NM, RI, TN, TX, and VT) use only Section 1115 waivers, and three states (CA, NY, and WA) use both waiver authorities. ↩︎
Nearly all (21 of 25) states with TBI/SCI waivers use Section 1915 (c), while four (DE, RI, VT, and WA) use Section 1115. FL continues to serve people with TBI but consolidated its TBI wavier into its long-term care Section 1915 (c) waiver for seniors and people with physical disabilities in FY 2018. In addition, while it does not have eligibility criteria specific to people with TBI distinct from the criteria for adults with physical disabilities, the benefit package in NJ’s Section 1115 waiver includes services targeted to people with TBI. ↩︎
Most (18 of 20) waivers that target children who are medically fragile or technology dependent are under Section 1915 (c), while two states (HI and RI) use Section 1115. States also may cover children with significant disabilities under the Katie Beckett/TEFRA state plan option. For more information, see Kaiser Family Foundation, Medicaid Financial Eligibility for Seniors and People with Disabilities: Findings from a 50-State Survey (June 2019), https://modern.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaid-financial-eligibility-for-seniors-and-people-with-disabilities-findings-from-a-50-state-survey/. ↩︎
Most (11 of 14) mental health HCBS waiver states use only Section 1915 (c), while two states (DE and RI) use only Section 1115, and one state (WA) uses both waiver authorities. ↩︎
Five of eight states using HCBS waivers to cover people with HIV/AIDS use Section 1915 (c) authority, while three states (DE, HI, and RI) use Section 1115 for this population. FL continues to serve people with HIV but consolidated its HIV waiver into its long-term care Section 1915 (c) waiver for seniors and people with physical disabilities in FY 2018. AL’s HIV waiver was discontinued in FY 2017. ↩︎
Specifically, IN does not apply an asset limit to two I/DD waivers and one TBI waiver, MA does not apply an asset limit to one I/DD waiver serving children; MO does not apply an asset limit to two I/DD waivers serving children; NE does not apply an asset limit to three I/DD waivers (including children and adults); ND does not apply an asset limit to two waivers serving medically fragile children and one I/DD waiver serving children; and WI does not apply an asset limit to one waiver serving children with I/DD. ↩︎
Asset limits that exceed the SSI amount are $4,000 in DC, MS, NE, and RI; $3,000 in MN and ND; and $2,500 in MD, and NH. ↩︎
MD applies a higher asset limit to one waiver for seniors and adults with physical disabilities; NE applies a higher asset limit to one waiver for seniors and adults with physical disabilities and one waiver for people with TBI; and ND applies a higher asset limit to one waiver for people with I/DD, one waiver for seniors and adults with physical disabilities, and one waiver for adults with physical disabilities. ↩︎
CT is one of eight states that elects the Section 209 (b) option, which allows states to use financial and functional eligibility criteria that differ from the federal SSI rules, as long as they are no more restrictive than the rules the state had in place in 1972. ↩︎
Such individuals are eligible for Medicaid by reason of a Section 1915 (c) HCBS waiver because they would be eligible under the Medicaid state plan if institutionalized, meet an institutional level of care, and would be institutionalized if not receiving waiver services. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a (a)(10)(A)(ii)(VI). They sometimes are referred to as the “217-group,” because they are described in 42 C.F.R. § 435.217. ↩︎
AK, DE, GA, HI, ID, KS, KY, ME, MN, MT, ND, OH, OR, VA, and VT. ↩︎
DC and IL did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
DC, IL and NC did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
DC, IL and NC did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
This section includes Section 1915 (c) and Section 1115 HCBS waivers. Section 1115 waiver services were assigned to the main population targeted by the waiver: seniors/adults with physical disabilities and/or people with I/DD. ↩︎
AR does not offer self-direction as a waiver service but does allow waiver enrollees to self-direct attendant care services using § 1915 (j) authority. ↩︎
Some states apply different self-direction policies to agency-employed vs. independent providers. ↩︎
In Ohio, legally responsible family members are permitted to perform nursing services, but they must be employed by a home health agency. ↩︎
This total reflects individuals on waiting lists in 40 of 41 states reporting waiting lists for Section 1915 (c) and/or Section 1115 HCBS waivers. It omits New York, which reports a waiting list for people with mental health disabilities but was unable to report the number of individuals on that list. It also includes partial data for California, which reported waiting list enrollment for its Section 1915 (c) waivers serving seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities and people with HIV/AIDS, but did not report enrollment on its Section 1115 waiting list for seniors and adults with physical disabilities. In addition, the following states did not respond to the question about whether there is a waiting list for the following target populations: New Jersey for people with I/DD, and New York for seniors and adults with physical disabilities and people with TBI/SCI. ↩︎
These states include IA, IL, ND, OH, OK, OR, SC, and TX. Ohio began screening individuals on the I/DD waiting list in late 2018 but reported no to this survey question. ↩︎
LA’s new assessment tool is the Screening for Urgency of Need (SUN). ↩︎
Beginning in FY 2016, totals include Section 1915 (c) and Section 1115 HCBS waiver waiting lists; prior years include only Section 1915 (c) waiver waiting lists. FY 2018 data omit New York, which reports a waiting list for people with mental health disabilities but was unable to report the number of individuals on that list. It also includes partial data for California, which reported waiting list enrollment for its Section 1915 (c) waivers serving seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities and people with HIV/AIDS, but did not report enrollment on its Section 1115 waiting list for seniors and adults with physical disabilities. In addition, the following states did not respond to the question about whether there is a waiting list for the following target populations: New Jersey for people with I/DD, and New York for seniors and adults with physical disabilities and people with TBI/SCI. FY 2017 data is used for DC, FL (seniors/physical disabilities only), IL, LA (I/DD only), ME (I/DD only), OH, and SD, because these states did not report FY 2018 data. ↩︎
Another 4 states (IL, ME (I/DD), OH, and SC) were unable to report FY 2018 waiting list data for some or all waiver populations. ↩︎
Not all states provided data for all waivers. The 8 states unable to report this data for any waiver waiting lists are IL, ME, MS, NH, NY, OH, SD, and VA. ↩︎
Thirty-seven of 51 states with waivers serving people with I/DD report waiting lists. In addition, NJ did not report whether it has a waiting list for people with I/DD. ↩︎
Twenty of 51 states with waivers serving seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities report waiting lists. Waiting list enrollment reflects partial data for CA, which reported waiting list enrollment for its Section 1915 (c) waivers serving seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities but was unable to report waiting list enrollment for its Section 1115 waiver serving these populations. In addition, NY did not report whether it has a waiting list for its Section 1115 waiver serving seniors and adults with physical disabilities. ↩︎
Five of 20 states with waivers serving children who are medically fragile or technology dependent report a waiting list. ↩︎
Seven of 25 states with waivers serving people with TBI/SCI report a waiting list. In addition, NY was unable to report whether its TBI/SCI waiver has a waiting list. ↩︎
Four of 13 states with waivers serving people with mental health disabilities report a waiting list. Waiting list enrollment includes three states. The other state, NY, reports unknown enrollment on its waiting list for people with mental health disabilities. ↩︎
One of eight states with waivers serving people with HIV/AIDS reports a waiting list. ↩︎
Of the 41 states reporting one or more waivers with a waiting list in FY 2018, 30 reported average wait time for at least one waiver with a waiting list (AL, AK, CA, CO, CT, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NE, NV, NM, NC, ND, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, WV, and WY), and 11 (AR, FL, GA, IL, ME, NH, NY, OH, UT, VA, and WI) did not report average wait time for any waivers with waiting lists. ↩︎
Within a state, some waivers prioritize only one group, while other waivers may give priority to more than one group. ↩︎
The 14 other states with waiver waiting lists were unable to report this data (CA, GA, IL, KS, ME, MS, NM, OH, SC, SD, TX, UT, VA and WY). ↩︎
These utilization controls are state policies, separate from the federal cost neutrality requirement for HCBS waivers. Under federal law, the state’s estimated average per capita expenditures for home and community-based waiver services must not exceed the state’s reasonable estimate of the cost of average per capita expenditures that would have been incurred without waiver services. 42 U.S.C. § 1396n (c)(2)(D). In addition, under long-standing federal policy, Section 1115 waivers generally are subject to federal budget neutrality, which requires that federal costs under the waiver cannot exceed estimated costs without the waiver. ↩︎
States with exceptions to hour caps are CA, DE, FL, KY, MD, MA, MO, MT, NY, NC, ND, OH, SD, TN, and TX. ↩︎
States with exceptions to cost caps are CA, DE, FL, GA, IA, IL, KY, LA, MD, MA, MN, MO, MT, NH, NM, NY, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, WA, and WY. ↩︎
Financial accountability includes the state’s payment methods and other program integrity considerations. ↩︎
National Core Indicators- Aging and Disabilities (last accessed Jan. 29, 2020), https://nci-ad.org/. ↩︎
DC, FL, IL, KY and MA report using quality of life measures but did not indicate which tool is used. ↩︎
Seven states (FL, IL, KY, MA, ME, SD, and WY) did not specify a tool. ↩︎
Six states (FL, MA, ME, MN, TX, and WY) did not specify a tool. ↩︎
Two states (ME and NJ) did not respond to this survey question. The eight states without a waiver ombuds program include AL, MI, MO, NC, ND, OK, PA, and WV. ↩︎
The 2016 Medicaid managed care rule requires states using capitated MLTSS to offer an independent beneficiary support system, in health plan contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2018, that provides the following services for people who use or wish to use LTSS: (1) an access point for complaints and concerns; (2) education on enrollee rights and responsibilities; (3) assistance in navigating the grievance and appeals process; and (4) review and oversight of data to guide the state in identifying and resolving systemic LTSS issues. KFF, CMS’s Final Rule on Medicaid Managed Care: A Summary of Major Provisions (June 2016), https://modern.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/cmss-final-rule-on-medicaid-managed-care-a-summary-of-major-provisions/. ↩︎
CA did not report the type of financial incentive offered to its health plans. ↩︎
The states without financial incentives are IL, MA, MI, NM, OH, and TX. Another six states did not respond to this survey question (AR, ID, LA, NC, RI, and VA). ↩︎
Four states (IL, KS, MA, NC) did not respond to this question. ↩︎
Nine capitated MLTSS states (AR, IL, MA, MN, NJ, NC, OH, RI, SC) did not respond to this question. In addition, two states without capitated MLTSS (IN and KY) responded that they planned to implement VBP for HCBS in the future. TX is currently participating in a CMS Innovation Accelerator Program project, VBP for HCBS, and plans to develop quality measures and support for health plans to implement additional VBP models. TX reports that some health plans have voluntarily implemented VBP models for HCBS. ↩︎
The informational bulletin indicates that the “use of enforcement discretion will be applied based on state-specific facts and circumstances and focused on states’ specific needs.” CMS Informational Bulletin, Medicaid Managed Care Regulations with July 1, 2017 Compliance Dates (June 30, 2017), https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/cib063017.pdf. ↩︎
Two states (MA and NC) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
These findings include personal care services delivered under state plan or waiver authority and home health state plan services. We did not survey states about EVV for home health services delivered under HCBS waivers. ↩︎
EVV applies to personal care services provided under Sections 1905 (a)(24), 1915 (c), 1915 (i), 1915 (j), 1915 (k), and Section 1115 and to home health services provided under 1905 (a)(7) or a waiver. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b (l)(5)(B) and (C). ↩︎
The original legislation required states to comply with EVV requirements for personal care services by January 1, 2019, but subsequently was amended to extend the date to January 1, 2020. 21st Century Cures Act, § 12006, 130 STAT. 1033 (Dec. 13, 2016), https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-114publ255/pdf/PLAW-114publ255.pdf. ↩︎
Federal matching fund reductions for non-compliance with EVV for personal care services are 0.25% in 2020, 0.5% in 2021, 0.75% in 2022, and 1% in 2023 and thereafter. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b (l)(1)(A). ↩︎
Federal matching fund reductions for home health services are 0.25% in 2023 and 2024, 0.50% in 2025, 0.75% in 2026, and 1% in 2027 and thereafter. 42 U.S.C. § 1396b (l)(1)(A). ↩︎
Four states (CA, IL, IA, and NY) reported their EVV model for personal care services as undecided, and DC did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
Four states (AK, AL, IA and IL) reported their EVV model for home health services as undecided. Six states (CA, DC, MS, NY, OR and WA) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
There are five major models among which states can choose, including provider choice, managed care plan choice, state mandated external vendor, state mandated in-house system, and open vendor. States also can choose to adopt a hybrid approach, using more than one model. CMCS Informational Bulletin, Electronic Visit Verification (May 16, 2018), https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/cib051618.pdf; ↩︎
KY (open vender for personal care, state-mandated external vendor for home health); LA (other model for personal care, state-mandated in-house system for home health); MD (state-mandated external vendor for personal care, open vendor for home health); NV and SC (other model for personal care, open vendor for home health); ND and VA (open vendor for personal care, provider choice for home health), ↩︎
One state (MA) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
42 C.F.R. § 441.301 (c)(4)-(6). The settings rule applies to HCBS provided under Section 1915 (c) waivers, the Section 1915 (i) state plan option, and Community First Choice. CMS has indicated that it also will apply the settings rule to Section 1115 waivers that authorize HCBS. CMS, Questions and Answers – 1915 (i) State Plan Home and Community-Based Services, 5-Year Period for Waivers, Provider Payment Reassignment, Setting Requirements for Community First Choice, and 1915 (c) Home and Community-Based Services Waivers – CMS 2249-F and 2296-F, https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/hcbs/downloads/final-q-and-a.pdf. ↩︎
These states are AL, AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, HI, IN, IA, KS, LA, MD, MI, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NM, NC, NY, OH, PA, RI, SC, SD, VT, VA, WV, and WI. The six remaining states are in “clarifications and/or modifications required for initial approval status” (IL, MA, ME, NJ, NV, TX). Id. ↩︎
Among these states, 27 identified settings that need to be modified both in FY 2018 and a prior year, nine states identified settings that needed to be modified prior to FY 2018, and three states have identified settings that need to be modified in FY 2018. One state (AR) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
CO, DC, FL, GA, IL, MT, NV, NC, PA, TN, UT, and WI were not able to provide the number of settings that must be modified. ↩︎
These settings were identified in both FY 2018 and a prior year (10 states), prior to FY 2018 (9 states), and in FY 2018 (1 state). One state (AR) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
CO, KY, NH, NY, OR, TN, and WI were unable to provide the number of settings that cannot be modified. ↩︎
These settings were identified in both FY 2018 and a prior year (16 states), prior to FY 2018 (8 states), and in FY 2018 (2 states). ↩︎
CO, CT, FL, ID, MT, NE, NV, NY, PA, TN, and UT were unable to provide the number of settings. ↩︎
These actions took place in both FY 2018 and a prior year (8 states), prior to FY 2018 (5 states), and in FY 2018 (9 states). One state (AR) did not respond to this survey question. ↩︎
CT, FL, ID, IL, MO, RI, TN, UT, and WI were unable to provide the number of settings. ↩︎
U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Home Care, Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay for Direct Care Workers (last accessed Jan. 29, 2020), https://www.dol.gov/whd/homecare/; 29 C.F.R. § § 552.3, 552.6, 552.101, 552.102, 552.106, 552.109, 552.110. ↩︎
Specifically, CMS anticipated that “many states will determine that, for purposes of the FLSA, home care workers in self-direction programs have joint third party employer(s) [such as the state or another entity] in addition to being employed by the beneficiary,” requiring the state or other entity to comply with minimum wage and overtime requirements. CMS Informational Bulletin, Self-Direction Program Options for Medicaid Payments in the Implementation of the Fair Labor Standards Act Regulation Changes (July 3, 2014), https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/CIB-07-03-2014.pdf. ↩︎
Medicaid fills in gaps in the overall health care system by serving as the primary source of coverage for long-term services and supports (LTSS), including home and community-based services (HCBS), as these services are typically unavailable and/or unaffordable through private insurance or Medicare. HCBS help seniors and people with disabilities and chronic illnesses live independently outside institutions by assisting with daily needs. This issue brief presents the latest (FY 2018) Medicaid HCBS enrollment and spending data from KFF’s 18th annual 50-state survey. Appendix Tables contain detailed state-level data. Key findings include the following:
Most HCBS enrollees receive services provided at state option. Over 2.5 million individuals receive HCBS through an optional Section 1915 (c) or Section 1115 waiver, and nearly 1.2 million receive optional personal care state plan services, while 600,000 receive home health state plan services, the sole required benefit. Fewer individuals receive HCBS through the relatively newer state plan options including Section 1915 (i) and Community First Choice.
Joint federal and state Medicaid HCBS spending totaled $92 billion in FY 2018, with nearly all spending for optional services.
National per enrollee spending varies among the HCBS authorities, ranging from under $8,000 for Section 1915 (i) state plan services to nearly $30,000 for Section 1915 (c) waivers.
Per enrollee spending by Section 1915 (c) waiver target population is highest for people with intellectual/developmental disabilities ($46,000). Per enrollee spending is relatively lower for seniors/adults with physical disabilities ($16,000).
State Medicaid programs will face increased pressure to meet the health and LTSS needs of a growing elderly population in the coming years, and their ability to do so could be affected by an economic downturn that could leave states with limited resources and require reductions in services offered at state option. In addition, if the ACA ultimately is struck down in Texas v. Azar, states would lose authority to offer some HCBS as well as some flexibility to design benefit packages. The 2020 elections also could have important implications for Medicaid and HCBS as policymakers may consider a range of proposals, from those that could cap federal Medicaid financing program-wide as in the President’s FY 2020 budget to proposals advocated by some Democrats to create a single, federal, universal health insurance program known as Medicare-for-all.
Issue Brief
Medicaid continues to be the primary source of coverage for long-term services and supports (LTSS), financing over half of these services in 2018 (Figure 1). LTSS help seniors and people with disabilities with self-care, such as bathing and dressing, and household activities, such as preparing meals and managing medication. LTSS needs arise from a range of conditions, such as cognitive disabilities, like dementia or Down syndrome; physical disabilities, like multiple sclerosis or spinal cord injury; mental health disabilities, like depression or schizophrenia; and disabling chronic conditions, like cancer or HIV/AIDS.1
Figure 1: Long-term services and supports (LTSS) spending, by payer, 2018
State Medicaid programs must cover LTSS in nursing homes, while most home and community-based services (HCBS) are optional.2 Spending on HCBS surpassed spending on institutional care for the first time in 2013, and comprises 57% of total Medicaid LTSS spending as of 2016 (Figure 2). Factors contributing to this trend include beneficiary preferences for HCBS, the fact that states are encouraging HCBS as an alternative to typically more costly institutional care, and states’ community integration obligations under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Supreme Court’s Olmstead decision. In Olmstead, the Supreme Court held that the unjustified institutionalization of people with disabilities is illegal discrimination and violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Figure 2: Medicaid long-term services and supports spending, by institutional vs. community setting
This issue brief presents the latest (FY 2018)3 state-level Medicaid HCBS enrollment and spending data from KFF’s 18th annual survey of all 50 states and DC. The survey tracks Medicaid HCBS across four types of state plan benefits and two types of waivers, which are described in more detail in Table 1,4 and also presents enrollment and spending by target population where relevant. In general, state plan benefits are provided to all Medicaid beneficiaries for whom they are medically necessary. Waivers allow states to provide services to specific populations, set enrollment caps, and expand income and asset limits. State plan HCBS include home health; personal care; Section 1915 (i), which authorizes HCBS targeted to a particular population with functional needs that are less than an institutional level of care; and Community First Choice (CFC) attendant services and supports. HCBS waivers include Section 1915 (c) and Section 1115,5 both of which allow states to expand financial eligibility and offer HCBS to seniors and people with disabilities who would otherwise qualify for an institutional level of care, while limiting enrollment.6 The Appendix Tables contain detailed state-level data. A related brief presents the latest data and highlights themes in state HCBS policies.
Table 1: Medicaid Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) Authorities
State Plan Benefits
Home Health Services
Part-time or intermittent nursing services, home health aide services, and medical supplies, equipment and appliances suitable for use in the home
At state option – physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech pathology and audiology services
Required
Personal Care Services
Assistance with self-care (e.g., bathing, dressing) and household activities (e.g., preparing meals)
Optional
Community First Choice
Attendant services and supports for beneficiaries who would otherwise require institutional care
Income up to 150% FPL or eligible for benefit package that includes nursing home services; state option to expand financial eligibility to those eligible for HCBS waiver
Optional
Section 1915 (i)
Case management, homemaker/home health aide/personal care services, adult day health, habilitation, respite, day treatment/partial hospitalization, psychosocial rehabilitation, chronic mental health clinic services, and/or other services approved by the Secretary
Beneficiaries must be at risk of institutional care
Population targeting permitted
Optional
HCBS Waivers
Section 1915 (c)
Same services as available under Section 1915 (i)
Beneficiaries must otherwise require institutional care
Secretary can waive regular program income and asset limits
Cost neutrality required (average per enrollee cost of HCBS cannot exceed average per enrollee cost of institutional care)
Enrollment caps permitted
Geographic limits permitted
Population targeting permitted
Optional
Section 1115
Secretary can waive certain Medicaid requirements and allow states to use Medicaid funds in ways that are not otherwise allowable under federal rules for experimental, pilot, or demonstration projects that are likely to assist in promoting program objectives
Federal budget neutrality required
HCBS enrollment caps permitted
Optional
HCBS Enrollment and Spending by Authority
Nearly all HCBS are provided at state option. Home health state plan services are the only HCBS that are required for states participating in Medicaid, covering 616,800 enrollees. Among the optional HCBS authorities, waivers continue to be the most commonly used. While some states have taken up Section 1915 (i) and/or CFC, these relatively newer state plan options have not supplanted waivers as the primary authority through which HCBS are provided. Personal care services are the most commonly used HCBS state plan option, offered in 34 states (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 1).
Figure 3: Enrollment in Medicaid HCBS by program authority, FY 2018
Enrollment across the various HCBS authorities ranges from 81,000 individuals receiving Section 1915 (i) state plan services to 1.8 million individuals receiving Section 1915 (c) waiver services (Figure 3 and Appendix Table 1). Most HCBS enrollees receive services provided through an optional authority. Over 2.5 million individuals receive HCBS through a Section 1915 (c) or Section 1115 waiver, and nearly 1.2 million individuals are served in the personal care state plan option, while about 600,000 individuals receive home health state plan services through the sole required HCBS benefit. Total home health state plan enrollment omits some or all individuals in four states (AZ,7 HI,8 NE,9 and TX)10 and total personal care state plan enrollment omits individuals in two states (KS11 and NM)12 that provide services through capitated managed care and cannot separately report enrollment data. In addition, New York is unable to report enrollment for CFC and Section 1115.13
HCBS enrollment under a state plan authority is slightly less than enrollment under a waiver authority (2.3 million vs. 2.5 million) (Figure 3). Total HCBS enrollment across all authorities is not presented as individuals may receive services under more than one authority. For example, in some states, an individual could receive some personal care hours through the state plan option and additional personal care hours through a Section 1915 (c) waiver. States can choose to allow enrollees to self-direct their personal care and/or home health services. Box 1 contains enrollment data for those services.
Box 1: Enrollment in Self-Directed Personal Care and Home Health State Plan Services
Nearly 700,000 people are self-directing personal care state plan services in 15 (of 20) states reporting this data.14 Self-direction typically allows enrollees to select and dismiss their direct care workers, determine worker schedules, set worker payment rates, and/or allocate their service budgets.15 The number of individuals self-directing services varies considerably from state to state. California has the greatest number of individuals (over 516,000) self-directing personal care state plan services, followed by Michigan (61,000) and Massachusetts (45,000). Self-direction of home health state plan services is less common. Among the three states that allow self-direction for home health state plan services, one state reports enrollment data (over 12,400 individuals in NJ).16
Medicaid HCBS spending totaled $92 billion in FY 2018, with nearly all spending for services provided at state option. Six percent of total HCBS spending is devoted to mandatory home health state plan services (Figure 4 and Appendix Table 2). Additionally, over two-thirds of all Medicaid HCBS spending is on services provided under a waiver authority compared to a state plan authority. Total spending under a state plan authority is under $30 billion, or about one-third of total Medicaid HCBS spending. Total home health state plan spending omits some or all spending in four states (AZ,17 HI,18 NE,19 and TX)20 and total personal care state plan spending omits two states (KS21 and NM0)22 that provide services through capitated managed care and cannot separately report spending data. In addition, New York is unable to report spending for CFC and Section 1115,23 and DC is unable to report spending for Section 1915 (i).
Figure 4: Medicaid HCBS spending by program authority, FY 2018
National per enrollee spending varies among the HCBS authorities, ranging from under $8,000 for Section 1915 (i) state plan services to nearly $30,000 for Section 1915 (c) waivers (Figure 5 and Appendix Table 3). This variation likely is due to the type and extent of services provided in the different HCBS authorities. For example:
Figure 5: Medicaid HCBS spending per enrollee, by program authority, FY 2018
Lower per enrollee spending for Section 1915 (i) compared to other authorities may reflect that Section 1915 (i) serves enrollees with functional needs that are less than an institutional level of care. By contrast, Section 1915 (c) waivers generally require enrollees to meet an institutional level of care and therefore are likely to serve individuals with more extensive and intensive – and therefore generally costlier — service needs.
Lower per enrollee spending on home health state plan services compared to other authorities likely reflects shorter periods of service utilization. In contrast, Section 1915 (c) waiver enrollees typically use services over an extended period of time, due to chronic long-term needs.24
Lower per enrollee spending for Section 1115 waivers compared to Section 1915 (c) waivers may reflect that most Section 1115 waiver states use this authority for seniors and adults with physical disabilities but continue to serve people with intellectual or developmental disabilities (I/DD), the costliest population, through Section 1915 (c).
Enrollment and spending increased in each HCBS authority from FY 2017 to FY 2018, except home health state plan services (Table 2).25 The two authorities with the largest percent increases in total spending were CFC and personal care state plan services; spending increases in these authorities appear to be driven by increased per enrollee costs rather than by increased enrollment. Notable state-level changes from FY 2017 to FY 2018 include the following:
Sizeable growth in CFC total spending and spending per enrollee is largely attributable to substantially increased spending in California (76%). More modest growth in CFC enrollment primarily reflects an increase from 61,000 to nearly 80,000 individuals in Washington.
Increased total spending and spending per enrollee for personal care state plan services reflects notable spending growth in South Dakota, Colorado, and California. Although enrollment in personal care state plan services increased slightly across all states electing this option, two states (MD and MT) had enrollment declines in both FY 2017 and FY 2018, as individuals transitioned to CFC services.
Growth in Section 1915 (c) waiver spending reflects notable increases in Nebraska (36%) and Pennsylvania (19%). Specifically, spending in one I/DD waiver in Nebraska grew substantially (87%), while spending in three Pennsylvania waivers serving seniors and adults with physical disabilities and individuals with I/DD grew by more than 20 percent.
Growth in Section 1115 waiver enrollment was driven by an increase in New Jersey (19%).
Growth in Section 1915 (i) enrollment is largely due to an increase from 3,100 to 7,000 individuals in Ohio.
Home health state plan services is the only authority with both enrollment and spending declines, which could be attributable at least in part to increased enrollment in capitated managed care, and states’ inability to isolate home health enrollment and spending from other services included in the capitation payment. States with substantial home health state plan enrollment declines as a result of such data limitations include Texas (-55%) and Nebraska (-85%). Overall enrollment across all HCBS state plan authorities also decreased from FY 2017 to FY 2018, likely driven by the home health decrease.
People with I/DD account for less than half of overall Section 1915 (c) waiver enrollment but more than two-thirds of spending (Figure 6 and Appendix Tables 4 and 5).27 Spending for this population is disproportionate to their enrollment as a result of their generally more intensive needs. By contrast, seniors and people with physical disabilities comprise over half of Section 1915 (c) waiver enrollment and over a quarter of spending.28 Other target populations, including people with mental health disabilities,29 people with traumatic brain or spinal cord injuries (TBI/SCI),30 children who are medically fragile or technology dependent,31 and people with HIV/AIDS,32 together account for a small share of Section 1915 (c) waiver enrollment and spending.
Figure 6: Medicaid § 1915 (c) HCBS waiver enrollment and spending by target population, FY 2018
The fact that services for people with I/DD comprise over two-thirds of total Section 1915 (c) waiver spending reflects high per enrollee costs for this population. There is substantial variation in per enrollee spending among Section 1915 (c) waiver target populations, ranging from about $11,000 for people with HIV/AIDS to over $46,000 for people with I/DD (Figure 7 and Appendix Table 6). Per enrollee spending for people with I/DD is closely followed by the TBI/SCI population ($44,000) and medically fragile children ($35,000). In addition to people with HIV/AIDS, per enrollee spending is relatively lower for seniors and adults with physical disabilities ($16,000) and people with mental health disabilities ($13,000).
Figure 7: Section 1915 (c) waiver per enrollee spending, by target population, FY 2018
Section 1915 (i) state plan option
People with I/DD account for the vast majority of enrollment and spending in the Section 1915 (i) state plan option, largely due to California’s program (Figure 8).33 Unlike waivers which require an institutional level of care, Section 1915 (i) state plan HCBS are provided to people with functional needs that are less than an institutional level of care. The next largest Section 1915 (i) target population for both enrollment and spending is people with mental health disabilities.34 Nearly three-quarters of Section 1915 (i) enrollment for this population is in Iowa and Ohio, while Iowa’s program comprises most of the spending ($94 million). Seniors and adults with physical disabilities account for a very small share of Section 1915 (i) enrollment and spending.35
Figure 8: Medicaid § 1915 (i) HCBS state plan option enrollment and spending by target population, FY 2018
Per enrollee spending is similar across Section 1915 (i) state plan HCBS target populations. Section 1915 (i) state plan HCBS per enrollee spending was nearly $10,000 (in 2 of 3 states reporting)36 for seniors and adults with physical disabilities, less than $9,000 for people with I/DD (in 4 states),37 and under $6,000 for people with mental health disabilities (in 4 states).38 Lower per enrollee spending for Section 1915 (i) state plan HCBS compared to Section 1915 (c) waivers could reflect a more limited scope benefit package and/or the fact that Section 1915 (i) enrollees have fewer and/or less intensive needs (less than an institutional level of care) that Section 1915 (c) waiver enrollees (who must meet an institutional level of care).
Looking Ahead
Medicaid HCBS enrollment ranges from 81,000 individuals receiving Section 1915 (i) state plan services to 1.8 million individuals receiving Section 1915 (c) waiver services, with joint federal and state spending across all HCBS authorities totaling $92 billion in FY 2018. Medicaid HCBS promote independence and self-determination for seniors and people with disabilities and chronic conditions by enabling them to receive assistance with self-care needs and household activities outside an institution. Medicaid provides substantial federal funding to help states meet their community integration obligations under Olmstead and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Most HCBS enrollees receive services provided through an optional authority, and nearly all HCBS spending is devoted to authorities provided at state option. Although home health state plan services are the only HCBS that states participating in Medicaid must offer, all states elect at least one optional HCBS authority. While nearly all Medicaid HCBS authorities are optional, Medicaid fills a gap by covering HCBS that are typically not available through private insurance or Medicare, and not affordable for many paying out-of-pocket, especially those with lower incomes. The optional nature of most HCBS results in substantial variation across states in enrollment and spending, reflecting states’ different choices about optional authorities, benefit package contents, and scope of covered services. States would lose some of their existing optional HCBS authorities and flexibility if the entire ACA ultimately is struck down in Texas v. Azar.39 Specifically, the option to offer CFC services would cease to exist, as would provisions that provide states with the flexibility to offer the current full scope of Section 1915 (i) services and to target those services to specific populations.40
The optional nature of most HCBS has implications for federal and state spending, especially during economic recessions. States face increasing pressures from revenue shortfalls during times of economic downturn. Optional Medicaid eligibility pathways and services, including HCBS, may be at risk for cuts as states must make difficult choices to balance their budgets.41
The 2020 elections also could have important implications for Medicaid and HCBS as policymakers may consider a range of proposals that could affect these populations and services. At one end of the spectrum, a Medicaid program-wide federal financing cap is proposed in President Trump’s FY 2020 budget, though efforts to repeal and replace the ACA and cap federal Medicaid funding through a block grant or per capita cap were narrowly defeated in Congress in 2017.42 In addition, Tennessee has submitted a proposal to CMS that seeks capped federal Medicaid funding through a Section 1115 waiver pursuant to state legislation that includes some seniors, nonelderly adults with physical disabilities, and children and adults with I/DD receiving HCBS.43 Depending on how they are structured, policies that would cap federal Medicaid funding could affect coverage, services, provider payment rates, and access to care for vulnerable populations.
At the other end of the policy spectrum, continued attention to Medicaid HCBS enrollment and spending is important to understanding proposals from some Democrats to create a single, federal, universal health insurance program known as Medicare-for-all. One of the most fundamental changes under Medicare-for-all would be uniform coverage of community-based long-term care services for all Americans. The current Medicare-for-all proposals would require and explicitly prioritize HCBS over institutional services, eliminating the state variation in eligibility, benefits, and payment and delivery systems that exists today under Medicaid, while also shifting responsibility for designing and implementing much of health policy from states to the federal government.44
MaryBeth Musumeci and Priya Chidambaram are with KFF.Molly O’Malley Watts is with Watts Health Policy Consulting.
Appendix Tables
Appendix Table 1: Medicaid HCBS Enrollment, by State and Authority, FY 2018
Appendix Table 2: Medicaid HCBS Spending, by State and Authority, FY 2018
Appendix Table 3: Medicaid HCBS Spending Per Enrollee, by State and Authority, FY 2018
Appendix Table 4: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Enrollment, by Target Population and State, FY 2018
Appendix Table 5: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Spending, by Target Population and State, FY 2018
Appendix Table 6: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Spending Per Enrollee, by Target Population and State, FY 2018
Appendix Table 1: Medicaid HCBS Enrollment, By State and Authority, FY 2018
State
State Plan Services
Waivers
Home health
Personal care
Community First Choice
Section 1915 (i)
Section 1915 (c)
Section 1115
Alabama
5,900
15,100
Alaska
300
3,700
4,300
Arizona
included in 1115
52,400
Arkansas
5,000*
13,700
15,500*
California
37,500*
273,800
228,200
55,800
149,500
474,300*
Colorado
23,500
100
46,300*
Connecticut
30,700
3,200
600
28,300
Delaware
14,000
400
1,200
6,900
DC
8,600*
6,000*
200*
6,900*
Florida
20,800
3,200
102,500
Georgia
6,200
42,600
Hawaii
included in 1115
2,900
8,500
Idaho
1,900
8,500
4,000
20,200
Illinois
14,400
161,600*
Indiana
16,300
4,700
49,100
Iowa
12,400
7,100
30,400*
Kansas
3,300
included in 1115
28,700
Kentucky
15,400
24,300*
Louisiana
6,600
14,200
20,600
Maine
1,900
3,300
7,500
Maryland
4,000
1,000
13,500
25,800
Massachusetts
52,200
45,000
30,600*
Michigan
3,300
60,700
24,700
Minnesota
28,900
43,700
81,500
Mississippi
1,400
700
25,800
Missouri
4,100
65,600
33,900
Montana
600
500
3,400
5,700
Nebraska
200^
3,800
11,800
Nevada
1,300
10,300
200
5,700
New Hampshire
1,400*
100*
9,200
New Jersey
50,300
49,500
10,700*
25,000
New Mexico
4,000
included in 1115
5,100
28,000
New York
101,400*
116,200*
NR
98,000*
NR
North Carolina
9,900
44,700
25,300*
North Dakota
1,100
1,300
5,800*
Ohio
26,900
7,000
111,400
Oklahoma
3,600
3,800
26,200*
Oregon
300
3,100
36,500
64,200*
Pennsylvania
26,300
119,700
Rhode Island
8,800
400
5,500
South Carolina
500
35,200*
South Dakota
11,200
1,600
5,900*
Tennessee
11,200
7,800
17,500
Texas
11,600^
369,700
30,000
200
48,100
68,800
Utah
3,100
200
9,300
Vermont
3,700
1,400
10,600
Virginia
1,600
51,300*
Washington
4,600
1,200
77,900
64,500
1,000
West Virginia
8,100
5,700
10,900
Wisconsin
5,900
17,900
89,900
Wyoming
400
5,300*
U.S. TOTAL(51 states):
616,800(51 states)
1,173,900(34 states)
392,700(8 states)
81,000(11 states)
1,806,600(48 states)
698,500(12 states)
NOTES: Totals may not sum due to rounding. NR indicates state did not report data. Included in 1115 indicates that state was unable to report state plan services separately from Section 1115 waiver services. Blank cell indicates state does not elect option. Total HCBS enrollment across all authorities is not presented as individuals may receive services under more than one authority. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes. ^NE and TX home health data are fee-for-service only and exclude capitated managed care.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 2: Medicaid HCBS Spending, By State and Authority, FY 2018 ($, in thousands)
State
State Plan Services
Waivers
Total HCBSSpending
Home health
Personal care
Community First Choice
Section 1915 (i)
Section 1915 (c)
Section 1115
Alabama
30,700
437,500
468,200
Alaska
1,400
61,900
265,100
328,400
Arizona
included in 1115
1,544,700
1,544,700
Arkansas
11,800*
94,300
389,600*
495,700
California
153,900*
2,960,800
5,562,600
494,600
3,810,300
4,679,100*
17,661,300
Colorado
345,800
1,200
903,700*
1,250,700
Connecticut
203,700
85,300
6,100
1,358,600
1,653,700
Delaware
63,900
500
137,200
87,200
288,800
DC
229,500*
254,000*
NR
295,000*
778,500
Florida
413,100
63,200
2,103,500
2,579,800
Georgia
4,700
1,212,900
1,217,600
Hawaii
included in 1115
135,600
104,200
239,800
Idaho
5,500
58,600
17,500*
364,000
445,600
Illinois
73,400
1,285,500*
1,358,900
Indiana
115,800
10,600
1,083,500
1,209,900
Iowa
44,600
94,400
647,900
786,900
Kansas
7,300
Included in 1115
1,198,300
1,205,600
Kentucky
30,500
805,100*
835,600
Louisiana
30,200
170,500
571,300
772,000
Maine
3,200
31,400
441,300
475,900
Maryland
2,900
7,300
300,400
1,145,200
1,455,800
Massachusetts
513,600
794,600
1,563,900*
2,872,100
Michigan
3,900
328,200
789,200*
1,121,300
Minnesota
67,800
1,017,200
2,911,800
3,996,800
Mississippi
1,600
7,600
400,800
410,000
Missouri
4,800
741,700
1,024,900
1,771,400
Montana
600
900
45,500
161,000
208,000
Nebraska
100^
15,400
365,700
381,200
Nevada
23,800
111,200
2,000
133,200
270,200
New Hampshire
6,500*
4,300*
315,700*
326,500
New Jersey
61,400
557,900
605,000*
183,000
1,407,300
New Mexico
12,000
included in 1115
379,900
329,400
721,310
New York
2,306,700*
3,274,500*
NR
6,426,100*
NR
12,007,300
North Carolina
12,800
450,500
897,500*
1,360,800
North Dakota
9,800
37,000
206,800*
253,600
Ohio
216,700
3,200
2,871,200
3,091,100
Oklahoma
15,700
10,900
476,400*
503,000
Oregon
300
7,100
673,700
100,700*
781,800
Pennsylvania
30,200
6,023,100
6,053,300
Rhode Island
115,400
6,300
71,800
193,500
South Carolina
4,200
657,700*
661,900
South Dakota
15,500
7,400
145,300*
168,200
Tennessee
226,500
684,400
297,400
1,208,300
Texas
13,900^
3,637,700
550,300
4,400
1,946,400
1,245,100
7,397,800
Utah
21,000
800
357,600
379,400
Vermont
7,600
13,900
401,700
423,200
Virginia
1,900
1,684,800*
1,686,700
Washington
6,000
6,400
1,432,500
728,600
1,300
2,174,800
West Virginia
9,400
69,400
406,300
485,100
Wisconsin
46,000
273,700
2,451,600
2,771,300
Wyoming
2,300
163,500*
165,800
U.S. TOTAL:
5,530,000(51 states)
15,070,500(34 states)
8,650,300(8 states)
640,900(11 states)
53,470,000(48 states)
8,945,000(12 states)
92,306,600
NOTES: Totals may not sum due to rounding. NR indicates state did not report data. Included in 1115 indicates that state was unable to report state plan services separately from Section 1115 waiver services. Blank cell indicates state did not elect option. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes. ^NE and TX home health data are fee-for-service only and exclude capitated managed care.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 3: Medicaid HCBS Spending Per Enrollee, By State and Authority, FY 2018 ($)
State
State Plan Services
Waivers
Home health
Personal care
Community First Choice
Section 1915 (i)
Section 1915 (c)
Section 1115
Alabama
5,200
29,000
Alaska
4,500
16,900
61,100
Arizona
included in 1115
29,500
Arkansas
2,300*
6,900
25,200*
California
4,100*
5,400
24,400
8,900
25,500
9,900*
Colorado
14,700
11,100
19,500*
Connecticut
6,600
26,600
9,800
48,100
Delaware
4,600
1,200
119,200
12,700
DC
26,800*
42,000*
NR
42,500*
Florida
19,800
20,000
20,500
Georgia
800
28,500
Hawaii
included in 1115
47,400
12,200
Idaho
2,900
5,400
7,600*
18,000
Illinois
5,100
8,000*
Indiana
7,100
2,200
22,000
Iowa
3,600
13,200
21,300*
Kansas
2,200
included in 1115
41,700
Kentucky
2,000
33,100*
Louisiana
4,500
12,000
27,700
Maine
1,700
9,500
59,200
Maryland
700
7,500
22,300
44,400
Massachusetts
9,800
17,600
51,100*
Michigan
1,200
5,400
32,000*
Minnesota
2,300
23,300
35,700
Mississippi
1,100
10,500
15,500
Missouri
1,200
11,300
30,300
Montana
1,000
1,800
13,200
28,200
Nebraska
300
4,000
31,100
Nevada
18,100
10,800
10,600
23,200
New Hampshire
4,700*
35,200*
34,300*
New Jersey
1,200
11,300
56,500*
7,300
New Mexico
3,000
included in 1115
75,200
11,800
New York
22,700*
28,200*
NR
65,600*
NR
North Carolina
1,300
10,100
35,500*
North Dakota
8,900
29,200
35,800*
Ohio
8,100
500
25,800
Oklahoma
4,400
2,900
18,200*
Oregon
1,000
2,300
18,500
1,600*
Pennsylvania
1,200
50,300*
Rhode Island
13,100
15,200
13,000
South Carolina
7,900
18,700*
South Dakota
1,400
4,700
24,500*
Tennessee
20,200
87,400
17,000
Texas
1,200
9,800
18,300
27,500
40,500
18,100
Utah
6,900
5,200
38,600
Vermont
2,100
9,700
37,900
Virginia
1,200
32,800*
Washington
1,300
5,300
18,400
11,300
1,300
West Virginia
1,200
12,100
37,300
Wisconsin
7,800
15,300
27,300
Wyoming
5,900
30,900*
U.S. TOTAL:
9,000(51 states)
12,800(34 states)
22,000(8 states)
7,900(11 states)
29,600(48 states)
12,800(12 states)
NOTES: Totals may not sum due to rounding. NR indicates state did not report data. Included in 1115 indicates that state was unable to report state plan services separately from Section 1115 waiver services. Blank cell indicates state did not elect option. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 4: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Enrollment, by Target Population and by State, FY 2018
State
Total No. of§ 1915 (c) Waivers
Enrollment by Target Population
Total
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adults with Physical Disabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep. Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
6
5,500
8,900
600
15,100
Alaska
4
2,200
2,000
200
4,300
Arkansas
4
4,500*
11,000
15,500
California
7
129,100
10,500
4,600
3,800
300
1,200
149,500
Colorado
11
12,500*
27,400*
1,800*
4,000*
600*
46,300
Connecticut
11
10,200
15,300
1,100
300
800
600
28,300
Delaware
1
1,200
1,200
DC
2
3,300*
3,700*
6,900
Florida
4
31,800
70,800
< 50
102,500
Georgia
4
13,000
28,100
1,500
42,600
Hawaii
1
2,900
2,900
Idaho
4
8,800
11,500
20,200
Illinois
9
22,800*
84,700*
10,800*
36,100*
900*
1,500*
4,900*
161,600
Indiana
4
26,600
22,300
200
49,100
Iowa
7
12,600
12,600
2,800
< 50
1,000
1,400
30,400
Kansas
7
9,600
6,000
6,700
600
5,300
500
28,700
Kentucky
6
14,800
9,000*
< 50
500
24,300
Louisiana
7
12,100
5,900
2,600
20,600
Maine
5
5,300
1,900
200
7,500
Maryland
6
16,200
9,200
200
100
25,800
Massachusetts
10
15,600*
14,600*
500*
30,600
Michigan
4
8,700
15,300
700
24,700
Minnesota
5
19,900
30,300
29,400
600
1,300
81,500
Mississippi
5
2,600
20,000
2,400
800
25,800
Missouri
9
15,000
16,500
2,300
100
33,900
Montana
4
2,700
2,600
400
5,700
Nebraska
5
4,900
6,900
<50
11,800
Nevada
3
2,200
2,700
800
5,700
New Hampshire
4
5,100
3,900
300
9,200
New Jersey
1
10,700*
10,700
New Mexico
3
5,100
5,100
New York
9
85,400*
2,500*
600*
6,400
3,100*
98,000
North Carolina
3
12,500*
10,000
2,900
25,300
North Dakota
6
5,500*
300
< 50
< 50
5,800
Ohio
7
40,200
64,600
6,600
111,400
Oklahoma
6
5,400*
20,800
100*
26,200
Oregon
6
22,500*
41,400
300*
64,200
Pennsylvania
10
40,300
44,700
33,800
1,000
119,700
South Carolina
7
11,500
20,400*
100*
1,400
800*
1,100
35,200
South Dakota
4
3,700*
2,100
100*
5,900
Tennessee
3
7,800
7,800
Texas
6
39,600
6,200
2,300
48,100
Utah
8
5,500
600
2,300
100
700
100
9,300
Virginia
5
13,100
38,200*
51,300
Washington
8
19,400
43,600
1,600
64,500
West Virginia
3
4,600
6,200
100
10,900
Wisconsin
6
28,800
61,100
89,900
Wyoming
5
2,600
2,500*
100
200*
5,300
TOTAL(48 states):
265
785,800 (48 states)
162,500 (8 states)
667,000(37 states)
128,200(16 states)
17,100(18 states)
3,600(5 states)
25,100(11 states)
17,500 (21 states)
1,806,800
No Section 1915 (c) Waivers (3 states)
Arizona
Rhode Island
Vermont
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Totals may not sum due to rounding. States may offer more than one Section 1915 (c) waiver per target population category. Programs with enrollment under 50 individuals are noted as < 50. Blank cell indicates state does not offer Section 1915 (c) waiver for that population. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 5: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Spending, by Target Population and by State, FY 2018 ($, in thousands)
State
Total No. of § 1915 (c) Waivers
Spending by Target Population
Total
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adults with Physical Disabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep. Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
6
351,300
78,400
7,800
437,500
Alaska
4
186,900
69,000
9,100
265,100
Arkansas
4
240,100*
149,500
389,600
California
7
3,474,900
39,800
108,900
175,400
2,600
8,700
3,810,300
Colorado
11
462,200*
361,500*
18,100*
38,300*
23,500*
903,700
Connecticut
11
883,000
395,400
2,100
100
14,700
63,300
1,358,600
Delaware
1
137,200
137,200
DC
2
226,100*
68,900*
295,000
Florida
4
1,067,000
1,036,500
< 50
2,103,500
Georgia
4
639,200
493,300
80,400
1,212,900
Hawaii
1
135,600
135,600
Idaho
4
266,900
97,000
364,000
Illinois
9
71,600*
429,400*
127,800*
558,200*
1,900*
24,000*
72,600*
1,285,500
Indiana
4
812,100
266,700
4,700
1,083,500
Iowa
7
520,600*
60,500*
23,600*
300*
10,300
32,500
647,900
Kansas
7
523,400
210,900
304,300
55,900
79,000
24,900
1,198,300
Kentucky
6
670,900
86,100*
2,600
45,600
805,100
Louisiana
7
454,900
112,500
3,900
571,300
Maine
5
385,100
40,000
16,100
441,300
Maryland
6
994,900
135,400
2,700
12,200
1,145,200
Massachusetts
10
1,301,200*
211,900*
50,900*
1,563,900
Michigan
4
444,600*
339,900
4,700*
789,200
Minnesota
5
1,403,400
435,600
932,600
42,400
97,900
2,911,800
Mississippi
5
104,300
233,900
44,100
18,400
400,800
Missouri
9
924,200
63,300
35,000
2,400
1,024,900
Montana
4
113,600
42,000
5,400
161,000
Nebraska
5
252,700
112,400
700
365,700
Nevada
3
114,400
13,900
4,900
133,200
New Hampshire
4
243,700*
48,900
23,100
315,700
New Jersey
1
605,000*
605,000
New Mexico
3
379,900
379,900
New York
9
5,970,300*
158,500*
5,400*
97,300
194,600*
6,426,100
North Carolina
3
652,100*
196,000
49,500
897,500
North Dakota
6
199,500*
6,900
200
100
206,800
Ohio
7
1,968,100*
777,500
125,600
2,871,200
Oklahoma
6
305,900*
165,900
4,600*
476,400
Oregon
6
58,500*
41,600
600*
100,700
Pennsylvania
10
3,177,600
1,481,600
1,331,200
32,700
6,023,100
South Carolina
7
423,300
192,200*
1,800*
3,300
4,700*
32,600
657,700
South Dakota
4
121,000*
20,600
3,700*
145,300
Tennessee
3
684,400
684,400
Texas
6
1,545,300
390,400
10,712
1,946,400
Utah
8
275,400
7,200
50,900
2,600
14,900
6,600
357,600
Virginia
5
908,100
776,700*
1,684,800
Washington
8
650,100
24,700
53,800
728,600
West Virginia
3
305,400
99,400
1,500
406,300
Wisconsin
6
632,800
1,818,800
2,451,600
Wyoming
5
118,100
37,400*
< 50
7,900*
163,500
TOTAL(48 states):
265
36,386,500 (48 states)
1,592,700 (8 states)
10,132,900 (37 states)
3,629,900 (16 states)
604,000(18 states)
40,000(5 states)
318,100 (11 states)
765,900 (21 states)
53,470,200
No Section 1915 (c) Waivers (3 states)
Arizona
Rhode Island
Vermont
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Totals may not sum due to rounding. States may offer more than one Section 1915 (c) waiver per target population category. Programs with enrollment under 50 individuals are noted as < 50. Blank cell indicates state does not offer Section 1915 (c) waiver for that population. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes.SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Appendix Table 6: Medicaid Section 1915 (c) HCBS Waiver Spending Per Enrollee, by Target Population and by State, FY 2018 ($)
State
Total No. of Waivers
Per Enrollee Spending by Target Population
Total
I/DD
Seniors
Seniors & Adults with Physical Disabilities
Adults with Physical Disabilities
Med. Fragile/Tech Dep. Children
HIV/AIDS
Mental Health
TBI/SCI
Alabama
6
63,600
13,800
12,700
29,000
Alaska
4
86,400
35,100
42,900
61,100
Arkansas
4
53,500*
13,600
25,200
California
7
26,900
3,800
23,600
45,800
8,900
7,200
25,500
Colorado
11
37,000*
13,200*
9,900*
9,600*
41,300*
19,500
Connecticut
11
86,600
25,900
2,000
200
17,900
106,128
48,100
Delaware
1
119,200
119,200
DC
2
69,000*
18,800*
42,500
Florida
4
33,600
14,600
2,600
20,500
Georgia
4
49,000
17,600
53,700
28,500
Hawaii
1
47,400
47,400
Idaho
4
30,500
8,500
18,000
Illinois
9
3,100*
5,100*
11,900*
15,500*
2,300*
15,800*
14,800*
8,000
Indiana
4
30,500
12,000
24,700
22,000
Iowa
7
41,400*
4,800*
8,300*
9,600*
10,600
22,700
21,300
Kansas
7
54,500
35,200
45,400
93,200
14,900
46,400
41,700
Kentucky
6
45,300
9,600*
66,300
92,700
33,100
Louisiana
7
37,500
19,100
1.500
27,700
Maine
5
72,300
20,700
80,700
59,200
Maryland
6
61,200
14,700
12,600
126,800
44,900
Massachusetts
10
83,500*
14,600*
108,000*
51,100
Michigan
4
51,400*
22,200
6,400*
32,000
Minnesota
5
70,600
14,400
31,700
69,700
76,100
35,700
Mississippi
5
40,200
11,700
18,200
22,500
15,500
Missouri
9
61,800
3,800
15,100
31,300
30,300
Montana
4
41,400
16,100
15,000
28,200
Nebraska
5
51,800
16,400
33,400
31,100
Nevada
3
51,100
5,200
5,900
23,200
New Hampshire
4
47,900*
12,700
88,600
34,300
New Jersey
1
56,500*
56,500
New Mexico
3
75,200
75,200
New York
9
69,900*
63,000*
9,000*
15,300
62,100*
65,600
North Carolina
3
52,300*
19,700
17,100
35,500
North Dakota
6
36,500*
23,900
214,500
6,000
35,800
Ohio
7
48,900
12,000
19,100
25,800
Oklahoma
6
56,700*
8,000
52,100*
18,200
Oregon
6
3,800*
1,000
1,900*
1,600
Pennsylvania
10
78,900
33,200
39,400
33,900
50,300
South Carolina
7
36,900
9,400*
30,300*
2,300
5,900*
30,400
18,700
South Dakota
4
32,300*
9,900
34,500*
24,500
Tennessee
3
87,400
87,400
Texas
6
39,000
63,500
4,600
40,500
Utah
8
50,200
12,400
22,600
23,800
21,300
47,100
38,600
Virginia
5
69,300
20,300*
32,800
Washington
8
33,500
600
33,700
11,300
West Virginia
3
65,900
16,100
18,300
37,300
Wisconsin
6
22,000
29,800
27,300
Wyoming
5
46,000
15,200*
300
48,500*
30,900
TOTAL(48 states):
265
46,300 (48 states)
9,800 (8 states)
15,200(37 states)
28,300(16 states)
35,200(18 states)
11,100(5 states)
12,700 (11 states)
43,700 (21 states)
29,600
No Section 1915 (c) Waivers (3 states)
Arizona
Rhode Island
Vermont
NOTES: I/DD = intellectual and developmental disabilities. TBI = traumatic brain injury. SCI = spinal cord injury. Totals may not sum due to rounding. States may offer more than one Section 1915 (c) waiver per target population category Programs with enrollment under 50 individuals are noted as < 50. Blank cell indicates state does not offer Section 1915 (c) waiver for that population. *Data from year other than FY 2018, as noted in table endnotes. SOURCE: KFF Medicaid HCBS Program Surveys, FY 2018.
Table Notes
Arkansas: Home health data are from 2017. Wavier data are from 2015 (#936 I/DD).
California: Home health data are from 2016. Section 1115 waiver data are from 2015.
Colorado: Waiver data are from 2017 (#6 seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #7 I/DD, #268 mental health, #288 TBI/SCI, #293 I/DD, #305 I/DD, #450 children, #961 TBI/SCI, #4157 children, #4180 I/DD.)
District of Columbia: Home health, personal care, CFC, 1915 (i), and waiver data are from 2017.
Idaho: Section 1915 (i) spending and per enrollee spending data include only the adult DD program and exclude data for the children’s DD program. The state reported 1,700 children with DD enrolled in 2017, but did not report corresponding spending data.
Illinois: Waiver data are from 2015 (#143 seniors), 2016 (#278 children), and 2017 (#142 adults with physical disabilities, #202 HIV/AIDS, #326 seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #329 TBI/SCI, #350 I/DD, #464 I/DD, #473 I/DD).
Iowa: Waiver enrollment data are from 2016 (#345 adults with physical disabilities, #4111 adults with physical disabilities, #4155 seniors) and 2017 (#213 HIV/AIDS, #242 I/DD).
Kentucky: Waiver data are from 2017 (#144 seniors/adults with physical disabilities).
Massachusetts: Waiver data are from 2016 (#59 seniors/adults with physical disabilities) and 2017 (#359 TBI/SCI, #826 I/DD, #827 I/DD, #828 I/DD, #1027 seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #1028 seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #40207 I/DD, #40701 TBI/SCI, #40702 TBI/SCI).
Michigan: Waiver spending data are from 2016 (#167 I/DD, #438 mental health, #4119 I/DD).
New Hampshire: Home health and personal care data are from 2015. Waiver spending data are from 2016 (#397 I/DD).
New Jersey: Waiver data are from 2011 (#31 I/DD).
New York: Home health and personal care data are from 2017. Waiver data are from 2016 (#40176 children) and 2017 (#269 spending-only TBI/SCI, #444 spending-only seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #470 I/DD, and #471 children).
North Carolina: Waiver data are from 2016 (#432 I/DD).
North Dakota: Waiver data are from 2017 (#842 spending-only I/DD, #37 I/DD).
Oklahoma: Waiver data are from 2017 (#179 I/DD, #343 I/DD, #351 I/DD, #399 I/DD, #811 children).
Oregon: Waiver data are from 2017 (#117 I/DD, #375 I/DD, #565 children, #40193 children, #40194 I/DD).
South Carolina: Waiver data are from 2016 (#40181 adults with physical disabilities) and 2017 (#186 HIV/AIDS, #405 seniors/adults with physical disabilities).
South Dakota: Waiver data are from 2016 (#44 I/DD, #264 TBI/SCI, #338 I/DD).
Virginia: Waiver data are from 2017 (#321 seniors/adults with physical disabilities).
Wyoming: Waiver data are from 2017 (#236 seniors/adults with physical disabilities, #370 TBI/SCI).
Endnotes
AZ delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated home health enrollment data. Instead, AZ’s home health state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. In FY 2018, Arizona reported that all 52,400 of its Section 1115 waiver enrollees received home health services. ↩︎
HI delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated home health enrollment data. Instead, HI’s home health state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. In FY 2018, Hawaii reported that 2,500 of its 8,500 Section 1115 waiver enrollees received home health services. ↩︎
NE reports home health state plan enrollment only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
TX reports home health state plan enrollment only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
KS delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated personal care enrollment data. Instead, KS’s personal care state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. ↩︎
NM delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated personal care enrollment data. Instead, NM’s personal care state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. ↩︎
AZ delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated home health enrollment data. Instead, AZ’s home health state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. In FY 2018, Arizona reported that all 52,400 of its Section 1115 waiver enrollees received home health services. ↩︎
HI delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated home health enrollment data. Instead, HI’s home health state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. In FY 2018, Hawaii reported that 2,500 of its 8,500 Section 1115 waiver enrollees received home health services. ↩︎
NE reports home health state plan enrollment only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
TX reports home health state plan enrollment only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
KS delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated personal care enrollment data. Instead, KS’s personal care state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. ↩︎
NM delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report unduplicated personal care enrollment data. Instead, NM’s personal care state plan enrollment is included in its Section 1115 waiver enrollment. ↩︎
NY is unable to report Section 1115 waiver managed LTSS enrollment by community vs. institutional setting. In 2015 (the most recent year for which NY data are available), 49,930 people received long-term institutional or HCBS in NY’s Section 1115 waiver. ↩︎
Among the 34 states offering the personal care state plan option, 20 allow self-direction. The 15 states reporting self-directed enrollment data are AK, AR, CA, FL, ID, MA, MI, MO, MT, NJ, OK, TX, UT, VT and WA. The five states that allow self-directed personal care state plan services but do not report enrollment are ME, MN, NV, NH and NY. ↩︎
Three of 51 states allow individuals to self-direct home health state plan services. CA and NE allow self-direction but are unable to report enrollment. ↩︎
AZ delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report home health spending data. Instead, AZ’s home health state plan spending is included in its Section 1115 waiver spending. Total home health state plan spending was $70 million in AZ in FY 2018. ↩︎
HI delivers home health state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report home health spending data. Instead, HI’s home health state plan spending is included in its Section 1115 waiver spending. Total home health state plan spending was $4 million in HI in FY 2018. ↩︎
NE reports home health state plan spending only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
TX reports home health state plan spending only for fee-for-service enrollees. ↩︎
KS delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report personal care spending data. Instead, KS’s personal care state plan spending is included in its Section 1115 waiver spending. ↩︎
NM delivers personal care state plan services through a Section 1115 capitated managed care waiver and is unable to separately report personal care spending data. Instead, NM’s personal care state plan spending is included in its Section 1115 waiver spending. ↩︎
NY is unable to report Section 1115 waiver managed LTSS spending by community vs. institutional setting. In 2015 (the most recent year for which NY data is available), total institutional and HCBS Section 1115 waiver spending was $146,589,000. ↩︎
Section 1915 (c) waiver participants were enrolled about 300 days a year on average in 2016, the most recent year data are available. KFF analysis based on CMS 372 reports for Section 1915 (c) waivers in 2016. ↩︎
The FY 2018 survey asked states to update prior years’ (FY 2016 and FY 2017) spending and enrollment data if necessary; therefore, all trend analyses reflected in this report includes the most recently reported FY 2017 data. ↩︎
Section 1115 waiver enrollment is not presented by target population because, unlike Section 1915 (c) waivers, Section 1115 waivers can include multiple populations, and states only report total Section 1115 waiver enrollment in our survey. ↩︎
48 states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to people with I/DD. The other three states (AZ, RI, and VT) serve their entire I/DD waiver populations under Section 1115. In addition, two states (NY and TN) serve some people with I/DD under Section 1115 and others under Section 1915 (c). ↩︎
42 states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to seniors and/or adults with physical disabilities. The other nine states (AZ, DE, HI, NJ, NM, RI, TN, TX, and VT) serve all senior and adult with physical disabilities waiver populations under Section 1115. In addition, three states (CA, NY, and WA) serve some seniors and adults with physical disabilities under Section 1115 and others under Section 1915 (c). ↩︎
11 states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to people with mental health disabilities. Another two states (DE and RI) serve people with mental health disabilities under Section 1115. In addition, WA serves some people with mental health disabilities under Section 1115 and others under Section 1915 (c). ↩︎
21 states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to people with TBI/SCI. Another four states (DE, RI, VT, and WA) serve people with TBI/SCI under Section 1115. ↩︎
18 states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to children who are medically fragile or technology dependent. Another two states (HI and RI) serve children who are medically fragile or technology dependent under Section 1115. ↩︎
Five states offer Section 1915 (c) waivers targeted to people with HIV/AIDS. Another three states (DE, HI, and RI) serve people with HIV/AIDS under Section 1115. ↩︎
Four states (CA, DE, ID, and MS) serve people with I/DD under Section 1915 (i). ↩︎
Four states (IA, IN, OH and TX) serve people with mental health disabilities under Section 1915 (i). ↩︎
Three states (CT, DC, and NV) serve seniors and/or people with physical disabilities under Section 1915 (i). DC did not report spending data. ↩︎
Reporting states include CT and NV; DC did not report. ↩︎
CA, DE, ID, and MS. ID per enrollee spending includes only the program for adults with I/DD because the state was unable to report spending data for the program for children with I/DD. ↩︎
The Trump Administration issued guidance encouraging state Medicaid waiver proposals that would impose work requirements as a condition of eligibility, a departure from the program’s history.
We assessed the potential implications of these requirements for people with HIV, a population that relies heavily on Medicaid and for whom there are particularly important clinical and public health reasons for maintaining consistent access to insurance coverage and HIV care.
We found that 13% of non-SSI, non-dual, nonelderly Medicaid adults could be targeted by work requirements, if rolled out nationwide. To the extent that they experience challenges in obtaining work, they could face disenrollment and service interruptions.
In addition, the 87% who would likely meet work requirements, based on current work status, or qualify for an exemption, could face difficulties documenting their compliance or verifying their exempt status, which could also jeopardize their coverage and continuous access.
Monitoring how work requirements affect access to care and coverage for people with and at risk for HIV will be important given the potential implications on health outcomes and prevention of new infections.
Introduction
The Trump Administration has issued guidance permitting state Medicaid programs to apply for waivers to institute work requirements as a condition of Medicaid eligibility, a departure from the program’s history. To date, 20 states have sought approval for such waivers, which remain controversial and face challenges in court.1 (For up to date information on state status of Medicaid work requirement waivers, see the Kaiser Medicaid Waiver Tracker.)
A separate KFF analysis of data on the general Medicaid population found that most (63%) non-dual, non-SSI, non-elderly Medicaid beneficiaries were already working and many others faced barriers to work that could make them exempt from the requirements.2 Additionally, large numbers of beneficiaries could face difficulties demonstrating that they were in compliance with or exempt from work requirements and as a result could lose coverage. For example, early state experience with work requirements has resulted in significant disenrollment from the state program, including among those who failed to demonstrate that they qualified for an exemption or were already fulfilling the requirement.3,4 In this data note, we assess the potential implications of work requirements for people with HIV, a population that relies heavily on Medicaid and for whom there are particularly important clinical and public health reasons for maintaining consistent access to insurance coverage and HIV care.
Medicaid is the largest source of insurance coverage for non-elderly adults with HIV, covering an estimated 42% of this group, about three times the rate of the adult population overall.5 The number of Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV has grown over time as people with HIV are living longer, new infections continue to occur, and as the program has expanded.6 Medicaid covers a broad range of services, many of which are important for people with and at risk for HIV, including prescription drugs, inpatient and outpatient care, and preventive services. Sustained engagement in care and treatment significantly reduces morbidity and mortality for people with HIV.7 Additionally, when someone with HIV has an undetectable viral load, typically achieved through antiretroviral treatment, HIV cannot be transmitted to others.8 As such, ensuring that people with HIV remain on coverage and engaged in care and treatment has critical clinical individual and public health benefits.
Findings
We analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Medical Monitoring Project (MMP), a national surveillance system which reports representative estimates of characteristics among adults with diagnosed HIV. We assessed working status and other characteristics of those covered by Medicaid among adults with diagnosed HIV during the 2017 MMP data cycle, the most recent data available. We excluded beneficiaries receiving SSI (i.e., those who qualify for Medicaid through a disability pathway), those over age 65, and those dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare as these populations are not included in work requirements under federal guidance.
Overall, we found that 44% of non-SSI, non-dual, nonelderly Medicaid adults with HIV are already working full or part-time.9
Figure 1: Share of Medicaid Beneficiaries with HIV Working Compared to Overall Medicaid Population (non-dual, non-SSI, nonelderly), 2017
Most state waivers require individuals to work at least 80 hours per month (or 20 hours per week) to satisfy the work requirement.10 Using these criteria, we found that one-third (33%) of non-dual, non-SSI, nonelderly Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV were working at least 20 hours a week, thus likely meeting the work requirement. In addition, beneficiaries with a disability (beyond those already excluded due to SSI eligibility), those with care-giving responsibilities, and students have also been exempt from work requirements under most state waivers. Using these criteria, we found that another half (50%) of Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV would likely qualify for an exemption on the basis of disability, which we defined as having either a functional disability (e.g. difficulty climbing stairs, dressing oneself, etc.) or an AIDS (stage III HIV) diagnosis. Smaller shares would likely qualify for exemptions due care-giving responsibilities (4%) (defined as having a dependent under 18 in the home) or being a student (1%). This leaves 13% who could be targeted by Medicaid work requirement policies, if implemented nationwide and not otherwise exempt.
Figure 2: Working Status of People with HIV with Medicaid (non-dual, non-SSI, nonelderly), 2017
Discussion
While most non-SSI non-dual adults nonelderly Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV would likely already meet work requirements or could qualify for an exemption because they face barriers to work, we find an estimated 13% could be targeted by such requirements, if rolled out nationwide (unless states add other protections for individuals with HIV, as some have done). To the extent that beneficiaries with HIV experience challenges in obtaining work, they could face disenrollment and, therefore, lose coverage. In addition, as studies have shown, the 87% of individuals who might already meet the requirement or could qualify for an exemption may find it difficult to document their compliance or verify their exempt status, which would also jeopardize their access to continuous coverage.11,12 While such challenges could affect Medicaid beneficiaries more generally, there are particular concerns in the case of a life threatening infectious disease such as HIV, where coverage interruptions and lapses could result in adverse health outcomes and increased HIV infections. Recognizing these challenges and their potential implications, three states (as of November 2019) have included specific exemptions for people with HIV under their definition of “medical fragility,” another required exemption category.13 However, most states have not done so and beneficiaries could still need to apply for and secure an exemption.
The future landscape in this area is uncertain. Currently, only one state (Michigan) is implementing its approved work requirement program while others have delayed implementation due to pending litigation. However, 10 states still have waivers pending. If additional states move ahead with implementation and more states receive approval from the federal government, it will be important to monitor how specific policies impact access to care and coverage for people with and at risk for HIV.
Methodology
This analysis relies on data from the Medical Monitoring Project (MMP), a CDC surveillance system designed to produce nationally representative estimates of behavioral and clinical characteristics of adults (aged 18 and older) with diagnosed HIV in the United States. During 2017–2018, MMP employed a two-stage, complex sampling design. In the first stage, 16 states in the U.S. and Puerto Rico were sampled. During the second stage, simple random samples of adults (aged 18 years and older) with diagnosed HIV were sampled from the National HIV Surveillance System (NHSS), a census of US persons with diagnosed HIV.
Data used in this analysis were collected by the CDC via telephone or face-to-face interviews and medical record abstractions between June 1, 2017 and May 31, 2018. All sampled areas participated in MMP.3
In 2017, of 9,700 sampled persons, 4,222 participated. The overall adjusted response rate was 46%. Data were weighted based on known probabilities of selection at state or territory and participant levels. In addition, data were weighted to adjust for non-response using predictors of person-level response. Although characteristics associated with nonresponse varied among states and territories, the weighting classes for the national data were informed by sex at birth, MSM HIV exposure category, and the person’s frequency of receipt of care (as indicated by NHSS records). This analysis includes information on 820 participants who represent all non-elderly adults with diagnosed HIV and Medicaid coverage but without SSI or Medicare coverage in the United States and Puerto Rico. All data within this brief were self-reported.
The authors wish to thank Dr. Sharoda Dasgupta and Dr. Linda Beer of the CDC and Wen Zhou of ICF International, Inc., who were instrumental in this work in providing access to data, guidance, and conducting statistical analysis.
Endnotes
As of January 2020, 20 states have sought CMS approval for a work requirement waiver under Sec. 1115. Of these, seven have been approved, one is currently implemented, in the state of Michigan. The Indiana waiver has been approved but is currently not being enforced because of a legal challenge. Implementation is pending in ten states. An additional, three states (Arkansas, Kentucky and New Hampshire) sought waivers but set them aside as a result of litigation. See: Kaiser Family Foundation. Medicaid Waiver Tracker: Approved and Pending Section 1115 Waivers by State https://modern.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaid-waiver-tracker-approved-and-pending-section-1115-waivers-by-state/↩︎
The Democratic presidential primary campaign featured extensive discussions of different health care reform proposals. As Democratic primary voters in early primary states begin casting their ballots to select their nominee, the latest KFF tracking poll finds that a majority of Americans favor a national Medicare-for-all health plan (56%) but a larger share favors a government-administered “public option” (68%). Notably, nearly half of adults (48%) favor both of these proposals. Among the 17% who favor a public option but oppose Medicare-for-all, when asked to explain their reasoning in their own words, the most common responses indicate that they prefer a public option because it allows choice (32% of those who were asked, or 5% of the total public).
Eight in ten Americans think taxes for most people would increase both under a Medicare-for-all plan (83%) or a public option health plan available to all (81%). However, more adults think that all Americans would have health insurance coverage under a Medicare-for-all system (62%) than under a public option (53%).
At the start of this election year, lowering prescription drug costs (22%) and continuing the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions (19%) lead the public’s health care priorities for Congress. Additionally, eight in ten or more say it is at least very important that Congress work on lowering prescription drug costs (87%), ensuring the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections continue (83%), and protecting people from surprise high out-of-network medical bills (80%) during the next year.
President Trump has an overall negative approval rating among the public when it comes to his handling of various health issues, with his most negative ratings for his handling of the Affordable Care Act (35% approve and 56% disapprove, for a net approval of -21 percentage points) and his handling of the costs of prescription drugs (30% approve, 54% disapprove, net approval -24 percentage points). On the other hand, majorities of Republicans approve of his handling of all the health care issues asked about in this month’s poll, especially his handling of Medicare (+68 percentage points net approval). Among all adults, President Trump’s net approval rating for his handling of Medicare is -10 percentage points.
In a December ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in Texas agreed with a lower court judge that the provision of the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is unconstitutional since Congress eliminated the tax penalty established to enforce it, and sent the case back to the lower court to decide how much of the ACA should be allowed to stand. A majority of adults say they are worried that they or someone in their family will lose health insurance coverage in the future if the Supreme Court overturns either the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions (57%) or the entire health care law (58%).
Medicare-for-all and Public Option
This month’s poll finds that majorities favor a national Medicare-for-all health plan (56%) and favor a “public option” (68%) in which a government-administered plan would compete with private health insurance and be available to all Americans.
Figure 1: Public More Likely To Favor Than To Oppose A National Medicare-for-all Health PlanFigure 2: About Two-Thirds Of The Public Favor A Public Option
Though both proposed changes to the nation’s health care system have majority support, a public option that would compete with private health insurance plans continues to garner more support than the more sweeping change presented in a Medicare-for-all plan (Click here to see a side-by-side comparison of the competing proposals). Large majorities of Democrats favor both proposals (77% Medicare-for-all, 85% public option), as do majorities of independents (61% Medicare-for-all, 73% public option). Among Republicans, one in four (24%) support a national Medicare-for-all plan and four in ten (42%) favor a public option.
Figure 3: Larger Shares Favor A Public Option Than A Medicare-for-all Plan
While both proposals aim to expand the role of the federal government in health care, the two plans are very different – which has been highlighted during the recent Democratic presidential primary debates. Yet, nearly half of adults (48%) favor both of these proposals while 22% oppose both. Few (6%) say they favor Medicare-for-all but oppose a public option while 17% favor a public option, but oppose Medicare-for-all.
When those who favor a public option but oppose Medicare-for-all are asked to explain their reasoning in their own words, the most common responses indicate that people like that a public option is not forced, but instead is an option that allows choice (32% of those who were asked, or 5% of the total public). Thirteen percent of those who were asked (2% of total) mentioned competition among private plans as the reason they support a public option but not Medicare-for-all. Smaller shares mention that it would allow people to keep their current plans, concerns about cost and increased taxes for a Medicare-for-all plan, or concerns about government involvement in health care (each named by 7% of those who were asked, or 1% of the total public).
Figure 4: About Half Of Adults Favor Both Medicare-for-all And A Public Option
Most Americans think the two major health care reform proposals being discussed by Democratic presidential candidates, as well as the 2010 Affordable Care Act, are all mostly intended to extend health care coverage to all Americans, rather than mostly intended to lower people’s health care costs. About two-thirds of Americans think Medicare-for-all (68%) is intended mostly to provide health care coverage to all Americans. Fewer, but still majorities, say the Affordable Care Act (59%) and a government-administered public option plan (58%) are intended mostly to provide coverage for all Americans rather than mostly intended to lower health care costs (26% and 29% respectively). For each of these health care reform proposals, majorities across partisans say they are intended mostly to provide coverage to all Americans.
Figure 5: Majorities Say Medicare-for-all, Public Option, And The ACA Are Intended Mostly To Provide Health Care To All Americans
Large Majorities Think Taxes would increase under either Medicare-for-all or a Public Option
Overall, the public does not perceive major differences in how a public option or a Medicare-for-all plan would impact taxes and personal health care costs. Eight in ten (81%) think taxes for most people would increase under a public option which is similar to the share who say taxes would increase under a Medicare-for-all plan (83%). In addition, majorities say people would continue to pay deductibles and co-pays when they use health care services under both a public option and a Medicare-for-all plan (68% and 61%, respectively). About half say individuals and employers would continue to pay premiums under both proposals (50% vs. 44%). However, there are some differences in perceptions of how the proposals would impact those with private health insurance coverage. Larger shares say people who buy their own coverage or get their coverage through their employer would be able to keep their current plans under a public option (59% and 60%), than say the same about a national Medicare-for-all plan (48% and 47%).
Figure 6: Most Expect Taxes To Increase, Deductibles And Co-Pays To Continue Under Both Medicare-for-all And Under A Public Option
There has been some shift in the public’s perception of how things would or would not change under Medicare-for-all since the first Democratic presidential debate. Compared to six months ago, larger shares of adults now say that, under Medicare-for-all, people with employer-sponsored insurance would not be able to keep their current coverage (45% vs. 38% in June 2019) and people who purchase their own plans would not be able to keep their current coverage (44% vs. 39%). Additionally, larger shares now say that individuals and employers would not continue to pay health insurance premiums (50% vs. 39%) and that people would not continue to pay deductibles and co-pays when they use health care services (33% vs. 27%).
Figure 7: Slight Shifts On Public Perception Of Potential Impacts Of Medicare-for-all Proposal
Democrats, in particular, are now more likely to be familiar with some of the potential impacts of a Medicare-for-all plan than they were in the June 2019 Tracking Poll. With the Democratic presidential primary campaign featuring extensive debates over Medicare-for-all, Democrats are now more likely than they were six months ago to say that under a Medicare-for-all plan individuals and employers would not continue to pay health insurance premiums (53% vs. 31%). Similarly, compared to six months ago, Democrats are now more likely to say that under Medicare-for-all people with employer-sponsored insurance would not be able to keep their current health plans (41% vs. 25% in June 2019), that people who purchase their own insurance would not be able to keep their current plans (40% vs. 24%), and that people would not continue to pay deductibles and co-pays when they use health care services (36% vs. 25%).
Figure 8: Larger Shares Of Democrats Are Now Familiar With Potential Impacts Of Medicare-for-all Proposal
Health Care Legislation and Court Actions
When asked about a list of potential health care priorities for Congress to address, majorities say it is at least very important that Congress work on lowering prescription drug costs for as many Americans as possible (87%), making sure the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing health conditions continue (83%), protecting people with health insurance from surprise high out-of-network medical bills (80%), doing more to address the heroin and opioid addition epidemic (75%) and to work on addressing the rise of vaping and e-cigarette use among teenagers (61%).
Figure 9: Half Of Adults Say It Is Extremely Important For Congress To Work On Prescription Drug Costs, Pre-existing Conditions Protections
When asked to choose their top health care priority, lowering prescription drug costs (22%) and continuing the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections (19%) top the list of most important priorities for Congress to work on. About one-fifth (21%) said none of these health care issues were extremely important for Congress to work on. Notably, lowering prescription drug cost and continuing the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections were also the public’s top health care priorities for Congress one year ago.
Figure 10: Prescription Drug Costs And Continuing Protections For People With Pre-existing Conditions Top Health Priorities For Congress
Lowering the cost of prescription drugs is the only health care priority that tops the list for Democrats (26%), independents (21%) and Republicans (19%). While making sure the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections continue is among the top priorities for Democrats (31%) and independents (19%), it ranks lower among Republicans (10%). Independents and Republicans are about twice as likely as Democrats to say doing more to address the opioid epidemic is their top priority for Congress of the health care issues presented.
Table 1: Pre-Existing Condition Protections and Prescription Drug Costs Top Public’s Health Care Priorities for Congress
Percent who say the following is the top priority for Congress to work on:
Democrats
Independents
Republicans
Lowering prescription drug costs for as many Americans as possible
26%
21%
19%
Making sure the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections continue
31
19
10
Doing more to address the heroin and opioid addiction epidemic
8
18
19
Protecting people from surprise high out-of-network medical bills
11
11
10
Addressing the rise of vaping and e-cigarette use among teenagers
4
9
7
NOTE: If more than one priority was chosen as “extremely important,” respondent was asked to choose which priority was the “most important.”
Most Are Unaware The House Passed Legislation To Address Prescription Drug Costs
In December 2019, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill that would require the government to negotiate the prices of a minimum of 25 Medicare Part D drugs annually and would cap out-of-pocket drug costs for Medicare beneficiaries.1 The House bill aimed at addressing drug costs would also provide dental, vision, and hearing benefits to older adults on Medicare. Two in ten adults are aware that the House has passed legislation to address the cost of prescription drugs and that the House passed legislation to address these additional benefits (21% each).
Though there was an effort by House Democrats to pass legislation to address surprise medical bills, ultimately, the House did not pass legislation to address this issue last year. A majority of the public (56%) are aware that the House had not passed legislation to address surprise medical bills while 14% say the House has indeed passed a bill and 29% say they “don’t know.”
Figure 11: Majority Of The Public Is Unaware The House Passed Legislation To Address The Cost Of Prescription Drugs
Majorities Disapprove Of President Trump’s Handling Of The ACA, Prescription Drug Costs
The latest KFF poll finds about four in ten adults (42%) approve of the way President Trump is handling his job as president, while a slight majority (56%) disapprove.
The President’s net overall job approval (measured as the share who approve minus the share who disapprove) among adults stands at -14 percentage points, and his net approval is also negative when it comes to handling various health care programs and issues. Among health issues, President Trump receives his lowest net approval ratings on his handling of the cost of prescription drugs (-24 percentage points) and on his handling of the Affordable Care Act (-21 percentage points), whereas his net approval on his handling of Medicare is somewhat higher at -10 percentage points. While President Trump receives his lowest net approval rating on his handling of prescription drug costs, KFF’s November 2019 tracking poll found that one-fourth of adults (26%) – including just one in four Democrats and independents and just three in ten Republicans – think it is likely that legislation to lower the costs of prescription drugs will pass this year.
Figure 12: President Trump’s Net Approval Is Lowest On His Handling Prescription Drug Costs and The ACA
There are stark partisan differences in President Trump’s approval ratings on various health care programs and issues. Democrats and independents give the President negative net approval ratings on all the health care issues asked. However, the President’s position with his base appears strong when it comes to his handling of health care issues, as Republicans give the President positive net approval ratings on each of the health care programs and issues included in the poll.
Table 2: Republicans Give Positive Ratings On Health Issues to the President While Democrats and Independents Give President Trump Negative Net Approval Ratings
Net approval for President Trump’s handling of:
Total
Democrats
Independents
Republicans
His job as president
-14
-85
-24
+85
Medicare
-10
-64
-25
+68
Medicaid
-16
-70
-29
+60
HIV/AIDS
-13
-59
-25
+48
Protections for people with pre-existing conditions
-16
-70
-32
+63
The heroin and opioid addition epidemic
-11
-57
-23
+57
The Affordable Care Act
-21
-74
-36
+56
The cost of prescription drugs
-24
-68
-35
+44
The Affordable Care Act And The Courts
Overall opinions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have continued relatively unchanged for the past two years since the Republican efforts to repeal the 2010 health care law. Half of the public (53%) this month hold favorable opinions of the ACA while 37% hold a negative opinion of the law. Partisans remain divided on the ACA as eight in ten Democrats (84%) have a favorable view of the ACA compared to a slight majority of independents (55%) and about one in five Republicans (19%).
Figure 13: President Trump’s Net Approval Is Lowest On His Handling Prescription Drug Costs and The ACA
In December 2019, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in Texas issued a ruling siding with a lower court judge’s decision that the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate is unconstitutional since Congress zeroed out the penalty for not having health insurance. The case was sent back to the lower court to decide how much of the ACA should be allowed to stand and many expect it to make its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.2 While about two-thirds (64%) of the public say they have heard at least “a little” about this ongoing case, just one in ten (9%) say they have heard “a lot.”
Recent KFF polling has found that a majority of the public do not want to see the Supreme Court overturn the ACA’s pre-existing condition protections; however, they are more divided on whether they want the Supreme Court to overturn the entire law. The January 2020 poll finds that a majority of adults say they are “very” or “somewhat” worried that they or someone in their family will lose health insurance coverage in the future if the Supreme Court eventually overturns either the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions (57%) or the entire health care law (58%). There are some notable differences across partisans with majorities of Democrats and independents saying they are at least somewhat worried that they or someone in their family will lose coverage if the Supreme Court overturns the ACA’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions (77% and 59% respectively) or the entire health care law (84% and 58% respectively), while majorities of Republicans say they are “not too worried” or “not at all worried” about the loss of coverage if the ACA’s protections pre-existing conditions (63%) or the entire health care law are overturned (70%).
Figure 14: Democrats and Independents More Likely Than Republicans To Worry About Coverage If ACA Is Overturned
Methodology
This KFF Health Tracking Poll was designed and analyzed by public opinion researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF). The survey was conducted January 16th -22nd, 2020, among a nationally representative random digit dial telephone sample of 1,212 adults ages 18 and older, living in the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii (note: persons without a telephone could not be included in the random selection process). The sample included 290 respondents reached by calling back respondents that had previously completed an interview on the KFF Tracking poll at least nine months ago. Computer-assisted telephone interviews conducted by landline (303) and cell phone (909, including 616 who had no landline telephone) were carried out in English and Spanish by SSRS of Glen Mills, PA. To efficiently obtain a sample of lower-income and non-White respondents, the sample also included an oversample of prepaid (pay-as-you-go) telephone numbers (25% of the cell phone sample consisted of prepaid numbers) as well as a subsample of respondents who had previously completed Spanish language interviews on the SSRS Omnibus poll (n=14). Both the random digit dial landline and cell phone samples were provided by Marketing Systems Group (MSG). For the landline sample, respondents were selected by asking for the youngest adult male or female currently at home based on a random rotation. If no one of that gender was available, interviewers asked to speak with the youngest adult of the opposite gender. For the cell phone sample, interviews were conducted with the adult who answered the phone. KFF paid for all costs associated with the survey.
The combined landline and cell phone sample was weighted to balance the sample demographics to match estimates for the national population using data from the Census Bureau’s 2018 American Community Survey (ACS) on sex, age, education, race, Hispanic origin, and region along with data from the 2010 Census on population density. The sample was also weighted to match current patterns of telephone use using data from the July-December 2018 National Health Interview Survey. The weight takes into account the fact that respondents with both a landline and cell phone have a higher probability of selection in the combined sample and also adjusts for the household size for the landline sample, and design modifications, namely, the oversampling of prepaid cell phones and likelihood of non-response for the re-contacted sample. All statistical tests of significance account for the effect of weighting.
The margin of sampling error including the design effect for the full sample is plus or minus 3 percentage points. Numbers of respondents and margins of sampling error for key subgroups are shown in the table below. For results based on other subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher. Sample sizes and margins of sampling error for other subgroups are available by request. Note that sampling error is only one of many potential sources of error in this or any other public opinion poll. Kaiser Family Foundation public opinion and survey research is a charter member of the Transparency Initiative of the American Association for Public Opinion Research.
Poll: Democrats Like Both the Public Option and Medicare-for-all, But Overall More People Support the Public Option, Including a Significant Share of Republicans
President Trump’s Marks for his Efforts on Drug Costs and Other Health Care Issues Lag His Overall Job Approval Ratings, But Republicans Approve
Lowering Drug Costs and Maintaining Pre-existing Condition Protections Top Public’s Health Priorities for Congress
With the first votes of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary season approaching, large majorities of Democrats – and most of the public overall – support both of the major approaches primary candidates have put forward to expand coverage and make health care more affordable, though a public option remains significantly more popular than Medicare-for-all, the latest KFF Health Tracking Poll finds.
A “public option”, in which a government-administered health plan would compete with private health insurance and be available to all Americans, garners support from 85% of Democrats and 68% of Americans overall. Smaller majorities favor a national Medicare-for-all health plan (77% of Democrats and 56% of Americans overall).
Most independents also favor both approaches (73% public option, 61% Medicare-for-all). While most Republicans oppose both, 42% support a public option.
“After months of debate, Democratic voters support both a public option and Medicare-for-all, but more independents and Republicans are open to the public option,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman said. “That support could become important in the general election and beyond.”
Large majorities think that taxes for most people would increase under both a Medicare-for-all plan (83%) and a public option (81%). People are more likely to say that all Americans would have health coverage under Medicare-for-all (62%) than under a public option (53%), while larger shares expect people with employer-sponsored coverage or who buy their own insurance to be able to keep their plans under a public option than under Medicare-for-all.
Following six months of news coverage of the Democratic presidential debates and campaign, the poll finds that the public – especially Democrats – are more aware of the potential impacts of Medicare-for-all now than they were in June.
Democrats are now more likely to say that individuals and employers would not continue to pay health insurance premiums under Medicare-for-all (53% now vs. 31% in June), and that people would not face deductibles or other cost sharing (36% vs. 25%). Similarly, Democrats are now more likely to say that under Medicare-for-all people with employer-sponsored insurance would not be able to keep their current plans (41% vs. 25%) and that people who purchase their own plans would not be able to keep their current coverage (40% vs. 24%).
On Drug Prices, President Trump Garners Low Marks from the Public, But Base Remains Supportive
Recent news reports suggest President Trump has raised concerns about polling showing higher marks for Democrats than for him on health care issues, including his efforts to lower prescription drug prices. The new poll finds his job approval on addressing drug costs (30% approve) lags his overall job approval (42% approve).
While polls generally show President Trump gets his highest marks for handling of the economy, the poll finds the public gives him lower-than-average approval numbers on most health issues, including the Affordable Care Act, protecting people with pre-existing conditions, and Medicaid (35% approve of each).
Majorities of Republicans approve of President Trump’s performance on health care issues – while Democrats overwhelmingly disapprove. Independents are more likely to disapprove than approve overall and on each health care issue.
Lowering Drug Costs, Pre-Existing Condition Protection Top Health Priorities for Congress
“It’s becoming abundantly clear that the high price of prescription drugs is the top health care priority that the public, across the political spectrum, wants Congress to take on,” said Mollyann Brodie, a KFF executive vice president and executive director of public opinion and survey research.
Other findings include:
Half of the public (53%) this month hold favorable opinions of the ACA while 37% hold a negative opinion of the law, a split that has been relatively stable over the past two years since the failed Republican effort to repeal the 2010 health law.
Few (9%) Americans say they have heard “a lot” about a pending court case that seeks to overturn the entire ACA, including its pre-existing condition protections. A federal judge ruled last year that the entire law should be invalidated, though a federal appeals court in December sent the case back to the judge to reconsider if any parts of the law should stand. The Supreme Court declined an expedited review of the case.
Most Americans are at least somewhat worried that they or someone in their family would lose coverage if the Supreme Court eventually overturns the entire ACA (58%) or just its protections for people with pre-existing conditions (57%). While majorities of Democrats and independents worry about such coverage losses, most Republicans say they are not too or not at all worried.
Designed and analyzed by public opinion researchers at KFF, the poll was conducted January 16-22, 2020 among a nationally representative random digit dial telephone sample of 1,212 adults. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish by landline (303) and cell phone (909). The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample. For results based on subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher.
This weekend, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that five people in the U.S. have been diagnosed with the latest international outbreak – coronavirus – which started in Wuhan, China, and has since spread to more than 10 other countries. Five major U.S. airports with direct flights from Wuhan have started screening arrivals for symptoms of the contagious respiratory illness, while the Chinese government has shut down transportation to and from Wuhan and 16 other cities in central China. Josh Michaud, an Associate Director for Global Health Policy at KFF, took time between interviews and providing insight on Twitter to offer perspective on the U.S. role and how response to this outbreak compares to others, such as SARS in 2003 and the West African Ebola epidemic that ended in 2016. The following has been edited from a longer conversation.
1. How has the U.S. role in global response efforts to outbreaks like this changed over time?
The U.S. has played an important role in basically every major international disease outbreak over the last few decades. More specifically, public health experts at CDC provide technical assistance and support for efforts to contain the diseases overseas. The National Institutes of Health and other U.S. institutes have been vital to the scientific research needed to understand these pathogens and to develop the diagnostic tests, medicines, vaccines and other tools needed to control them. Even diplomats at the State Department and elsewhere work to coordinate U.S. efforts with country partners and with international organizations like the World Health Organization (WHO). Through foreign assistance agencies like USAID, the U.S. often provides funding and other technical assistance.
These main roles haven’t changed much, although the extent of U.S. involvement and types of assistance have varied greatly. It depends on the severity, the risk, and also where geographically these outbreaks are occurring. The U.S. was heavily involved in responding to Ebola in West Africa, 2014-2015. During that outbreak, the U.S. provided $3.7 billion in international assistance, hundreds of CDC experts worked on the response, and almost 3,000 U.S. troops were deployed. Going back a little further, the U.S. had a smaller international footprint when it came to the SARS epidemic of 2003, when U.S. engagement came in the form of technical support, guidance and scientific research contributing to the efforts to contain that outbreak. The U.S. was heavily focused on preventing and containing SARS within our own borders as well.
At this point, there’s little indication that the U.S. is planning to provide funding to other countries facing this new coronavirus. For the most part, China is seen as capable of addressing the outbreak on its own and is highly capable, scientifically and from a public health standpoint. The WHO is leading the international collaboration effort and just announced that the outbreak does not constitute an international emergency, but it does constitute an emergency in China.
When an outbreak occurs in a very poor country, which may lack China’s capacity, for example, and where the population may be especially vulnerable, that’s often where the U.S. will step up and play a larger role. And that’s what we saw in the Ebola case. Things could change with the current outbreak in the future.
2. China is implementing travel restrictions in the city of Wuhan and other affected areas, and some U.S. airports are screening travelers arriving from Wuhan for signs of the virus. How does the U.S. decide when and where to enact policies like this? What are the strengths or limitations?
China’s decision to essentially quarantine tens of millions of people in and around Wuhan is really unprecedented.Needless to say, this is a major imposition on people and requires an incredible amount of effort and resources to implement. And it remains to be seen whether the benefits to interrupting the outbreak will outweigh the economic and social costs. So it’s highly unlikely the U.S. would institute a similar policy, given what we know about the virus and its risks.In fact, the last time the U.S. implemented the mass quarantine at all was over a hundred years ago during the 1918 influenza pandemic.
As you noted, the U.S. has taken some steps with the CDC screening travelers arriving from Wuhan at five international airports. The decision was likely made as a proactive step to demonstrate resolve to both identify and to try to prevent importation of cases. At this point, the risk to Americans is still very low. There’s a debate about whether the benefits of this type of screening are worth the cost. The CDC has dispatched hundreds of workers to support the efforts at the airports — an expensive proposition. From prior outbreaks, studies have shown that screening of this type wasn’t very effective at identifying cases. Not a single case of SARS was identified when millions of arriving passengers were screened across multiple countries. The first U.S. case infected with the new virus came into the country before the enhanced screening began, and they landed in Seattle (not one of the 5 airport screening sites), so they wouldn’t have been found through this screening anyway.
There is also a regular, so-called “passive” surveillance system, which is how the first U.S. case of coronavirus was identified. This person saw the news, went to their health care provider, told them about recent travel in mainland China, and reported symptoms of an influenza-like disease. That person was tested, reported to the state authorities and the CDC. So making sure providers have the information and the diagnostic criteria they need to identify cases that way is very important.
3. How might recent U.S. policies or politics affect this outbreak?
There’s little indication right now that the U.S. will be heavily involved in any of the international responses to this outbreak, other than the kinds of technical assistance and expertise that the CDC and NIH can provide. But given it’s an election year, if the outbreak continues to expand and more cases come into the country from elsewhere, we could certainly see more heightened politics surrounding the issue. We saw that during the Ebola epidemic, where there was a push to ban all travel from the affected countries, even though it went against the CDC’s recommendations and was seen as overly restrictive. Unfortunately, those affected by outbreaks are often stigmatized and attacked, something that is not limited to the U.S.
President Trump has stated that he believes the U.S. government is handling the current situation well, and that China is capable of addressing the outbreak in their country. So we’ll see how policy may change, but it would be surprising to see a major push for U.S. assistance outside the U.S. in this case, unless the virus itself becomes more dangerous or spread more widely.
On November 18, 2019, the Trump Administration released a proposed rule called the Medicaid Fiscal Accountability Regulation (MFAR). The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) says that the rule would promote transparency by establishing new reporting requirements related to supplemental payments to Medicaid providers and upper payment limits (UPL) on what providers can be paid by Medicaid programs. In addition to new reporting requirements, the rule makes changes to the rules and review of supplemental payments and UPL arrangements as well as changes to financing the non-federal share of Medicaid with new requirements and reviews of state financing mechanisms. The rule was issued as part of the administration’s program integrity strategy. The changes proposed are extremely technical and complex but are likely to have significant implications for provider payment rates and state financing of Medicaid by disrupting current arrangements and restricting the future use of such arrangements. This brief provides some context on Medicaid financing, an overview of current state payment and financing rules, the provisions in the rule and potential implications for considerations.
Current Rules. The matching structure of Medicaid creates tension between federal and state financing of the program, giving state flexibility to meet health needs, but also an incentive to maximize federal revenues. The rules around payment and financing are complex. Fee-for-service provider reimbursements include base payments, supplemental payments, UPL calculations and disproportionate share hospital payments (DSH). Financing mechanisms include provider taxes and donations, intergovernmental transfers (IGTs) and certified public expenditures (CPEs).
Proposed Changes. MFAR proposes a number of highly technical changes to supplemental payments and state financing arrangements designed to improve transparency and program integrity including increased reporting, limiting UPL arrangements to 3 years at a time with additional requirements for review, changes to UPLs for physicians, new hold-harmless tests for donations and IGTs, and changes to the definitions and review of health care taxes.
Potential Implications. The proposed rule would codify some current practices, though there are also new provisions. The regulatory impact statement notes that the fiscal impact on the Medicaid program from the implementation of the policies in the proposed rule is unknown except for some more narrow provisions. Since all states rely on at least one of these payment or financing mechanisms, the changes could have significant implications for providers and state budgets; but could have vastly different implications across states. Some have noted that it is not clear how CMS will apply some of the new standards and that there is a lot of discretion available to CMS which could leave states facing high levels of uncertainty about the impact of the changes. Given the magnitude of the potential changes and lack of data to determine the fiscal impact, some are calling for additional data collection prior to implementing the changes. Looking ahead, the proposed rule is open for public comment though February 1, 2020.
Background
The matching structure of Medicaid financing has always produced pressures and tension between the federal government and the states. The current structure provides states with substantial (though not total) flexibility to address specific state needs and priorities and to make adjustments based on changing needs and demands of the program (i.e. cost of prescription drugs or economic downturns). Due to the matching structure, Medicaid is a significant program in state budgets, accounting for 16.4% of state funds (including general and other); however, Medicaid also accounts for over half of all federal revenue for states.
While states have incentives to control Medicaid costs because states share in the costs of the program, states have also sought to maximize federal Medicaid funds in ways not necessarily intended by Congress by artificially inflating the federal share of Medicaid spending, sometimes using legal financing mechanisms, including DSH payments, supplemental payments, provider taxes as a source of state Medicaid funds, and intergovernmental transfers. Over time, as states have found “loopholes” to maximize federal funding, federal laws and rules were enacted to curtail inappropriate spending. For example, federal laws and rules were enacted in 1991 to impose limits on DSH spending and also to impose rules around the use of UPLs.
Citing goals to promote transparency and program integrity, as well as the rise in the use of supplemental payments, provider taxes and other financing mechanism, CMS has put forth the Medicaid Financial Accountability Rule (MFAR). CMS states that some provisions are codifying existing rules and practices, while some provisions are significantly broadening CMS’s ability to collect data and review and restrict certain payment and financing mechanisms.
What are the current Medicaid provider reimbursement and financing rules?
Current provider reimbursement rules
States have latitude to determine fee-for-service provider payments so long as the payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, quality, and access rules and safeguard against unnecessary utilization.Within these broad guidelines, provider payments must be sufficient to ensure Medicaid beneficiaries with access to care that is equal to others in the same geographic area. Federal standards generally do not address how states structure the delivery system used to provide services to Medicaid enrollees.
Provider rates are generally comprised of base rates as well as supplemental payments but are subject to aggregate upper payment limits by provider type and class. Base payments are generally paid for claims for specific services provided to specific Medicaid enrollees in a fee-for-service (FFS) environment. Such payments may vary based on level of care, complexity, and intensity of services. Supplemental payments are payments beyond the base rate that may or may not be tied to specific services. States are limited in making supplemental payments by the Upper Payment Limits (UPL) rules that allow states to make up the difference between a reasonable estimate of what Medicare would pay and Medicaid payments. UPL limits are set in aggregate for the following services: inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, intermediate care facilities for persons with intellectual disabilities, (ICFs/ID), and clinics. The UPLs are also calculated by three ownership categories (state government, non-state government, and private). Separate UPLs are used for physician and other practitioner services that are tied to average commercial rates (ACR).
Federal law requires that state Medicaid programs make Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments to qualifying hospitals that serve a large number of Medicaid and uninsured individuals. Within the annual DSH allotments to states and hospital-specific limits, states have considerable flexibility on how to distribute DSH funds. Based on the assumption of increased coverage and therefore reduced uncompensated care costs under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the law called for reductions in Medicaid DSH payments, originally scheduled to begin in 2014 but they have been delayed and never implemented. The ACA required the Secretary of HHS to develop a methodology to allocate the reductions that must take into account certain factors that would allocate larger percentage reductions on states with the lowest percentages of uninsured individuals and states that do not target DSH payments to hospitals with high levels of uncompensated care. In FY 2018, DSH payments totaled $16.5 billion (2.8% of all Medicaid spending).
Current financing rules
Under current law, Medicaid provides a guarantee to individuals eligible for services and to states for federal matching payments with no pre-set limit. Medicaid provides an entitlement to income-eligible individuals. The federal government matches state spending for eligible beneficiaries and qualifying services based on state spending and program need without a limit. The federal share of Medicaid is determined by a formula set in statute that is based on a state’s per capita income. The formula is designed so that the federal government pays a larger share of program costs in poorer states. The federal share (FMAP) varies by state from a floor of 50 percent to a high of 77 percent in 2020, and states may receive higher FMAPs for certain services or populations. There are special match rates for those covered under the ACA’s Medicaid expansion, administrative costs, and other services. To participate in Medicaid and receive federal matching dollars, states must meet core federal requirements. However, states may also receive federal matching funds to cover services and populations that are not required by the statute. States also have discretion to determine how to purchase covered services (e.g., through fee-for-service or managed care arrangements) and to set provider payment amounts. Based in part on program flexibility, spending per Medicaid enrollee varies significantly across eligibility groups and states.
States can use provider taxes, IGTs (intergovernmental transfers) and certified public expenditures (CPEs) to help finance the state share of Medicaid. States have some flexibility to use funding from local governments or revenue collected from provider taxes and fees to help finance the state share of Medicaid. Intergovernmental transfers are transfers of public funds between governmental entities. The transfer may take place from one level of government to another (e.g., counties to states) or within the same level of government (e.g., from a state university hospital to the state Medicaid agency). Certified public expenditures are certifications by a government that authorized funds were spent on Medicaid expenses that qualify for federal matching. The federal Medicaid statute explicitly recognizes the ability of states to use IGTs and CPEs for Medicaid financing purposes. There is no state specific data that accounts for how often and the magnitude of Medicaid spending financed through IGTs and CPEs.
Provider taxes used for the state share of Medicaid spending must be broad-based and uniformly imposed (although states can receive waivers of these provisions if certain conditions are met). Provider taxes cannot hold providers harmless from the burden of the tax (e.g., by increasing reimbursement rates to make up for the tax). Federal regulations create a safe harbor from the hold-harmless test for taxes where collections are 6.0 percent or less of net patient revenues. Federal legislative proposals have considered phasing down the maximum federally allowable safe harbor limit under the “hold-harmless” rule from the current 6 percent level. All states (except Alaska) have at least one provider tax in place and many states have more than three.
Upper Payment Limit (UPL) payments arrangement requirements. The proposed rule would add extensive review and reporting requirements to add or renew supplemental payments, including a detailed description of the methodology to distribute payments, a monitoring plan, and for renewals, an evaluation of how supplemental payments meet economy, efficiency and quality of care requirements. CMS proposes to limit approvals of UPL payments to three years at a time, which could create uncertainty for states and providers. The proposed rule would codify the rules related to the methods of determining the UPL by using Medicare equivalent payments or cost amounts. The rule also provides definitions of the ownership class of providers for the purposes of determining the UPL, which could restrict or change existing provider classes for purposes of determining UPL payments. The rule proposes that states report provider level data on supplemental payments and provider contributions to the non-federal share.
Supplemental UPL payments to physicians. The proposed rule would limit supplemental payments to physicians and other practitioners to 50% of base payments (or 75% of base payments for rural areas and services in designated health professional shortage areas). States are currently able to pay practitioners up to the average commercial rates (ACR). The rule states that some of these supplemental payments have resulted in payments to providers in excess of a reasonable estimate of what Medicare would have paid because ACRs are generally higher than Medicare rates. The proposed rule estimates that this change could result in a reduction in payments of $222 million in total computable Medicaid reimbursement.
DSH provisions. The proposed rule requires new reporting requirements for the annual DSH audit reports, specifically that audit findings be quantified. CMS also proposes to allow for publication of the DSH allotments online through the Medicaid.gov website instead of the Federal Register.
Proposed Medicaid financing changes
Health care taxes. The proposed rule adds health insurers as a permissible class of health care items and services for imposing taxes. In addition, the rule broadens the definition of a health-related tax to allow CMS to examine the parameters of the tax and the totality of circumstances to determine if certain taxes are receiving differential treatment and should be subject the health-related tax rules. The rule also would allow CMS to deny waivers of the “broad-based and uniform” requirements if the tax would place a higher burden on the Medicaid program and also limit approved waivers to three years. The rule also would impose a new net effect standard to assess whether providers are held harmless from the effects of a tax. As all states but Alaska use provider taxes to help finance the state share of Medicaid and 35 states have provider tax waivers, changes that would restrict or make it more difficult to impose such taxes or obtain waivers could have broad implications on Medicaid and state budgets.
IGTs and CPEs. The proposed rule would limit permissible IGTs and CPEs to funds from units of governments, state or local taxes or funds appropriated to state university teaching hospitals. Such changes are aimed at addressing financing arrangements involving certain public-private partnerships and could restrict which entities can make IGTs (like public hospitals). The proposed rule would allow CMS to apply new “net effect” standards to determine if certain IGTs involve provider donations that do not comply with hold-harmless rules. To limit the use of CPEs, the rule would limit Medicaid payments to costs and require that providers retain the full amount of all Medicaid payments. In addition, the rules would not allow states to withhold part of a Medicaid payment or require providers to give back part of a payment. This provision could affect the ability of states to enter into certain financing agreements with providers through CPEs. Similar to restrictions with provider taxes, restrictions on states’ ability to use IGTs and CPEs could limit the state share of Medicaid and therefore overall Medicaid funding.
Donations. The proposed rule makes changes to expand how CMS can evaluate if a provider donation is meeting a hold-harmless test. Under the proposed rule, CMS could consider the totality of circumstances to assess if the net effect of a financing arrangement between the state and the provider (or other entity making the donation) results in a reasonable expectation that the provider, provider class, or related entity will receive a return of all or a portion of the donation either directly or indirectly. If existing arrangements are deemed impermissible, and states are not able to use other financing arrangements, states may face reductions in overall Medicaid funding.
Variation based on eligibility category. The proposed rule specifies that states cannot vary fee-for-service payments for Medicaid services based on eligibility or enrollment under a waiver.
What are the potential implications of MFAR?
The regulatory impact statement notes the fiscal impact of the Medicaid program from the implementation of the policies in the proposed rule is unknown except for some narrow provisions related to data reporting and the limit on supplemental payments to physicians. Given the potential of far reaching effects and uncertainty of the implications, some have called for collecting additional data before implementing some changes. There is little consistent information available to quantify the range of supplemental payments or financing arrangements that could be effected by the proposed changes. However, it is likely that most if not all states employ some type of arrangement that could be affected under the rule, which would create significant uncertainty in state budgeting. Restricting or limiting state financing mechanisms for Medicaid would mean states would need to dedicate additional state general fund dollars to maintain current programs. Without the state match, states would not be able to draw down the federal matching funds which could result in cuts in reimbursement for providers with implications for enrollees. Some key questions that could influence the effects of the proposed rule include:
Overall implications: What is the fiscal magnitude in terms of provider payment changes and effects on state budgets tied to the provisions in MFAR? How would the implications of the changes vary across states? How would this ultimately affect eligibility, benefits and provider payments and access to care?
Changes to supplemental payments: How will CMS determine if supplemental payments are meeting program objectives? What are the implications of limiting approval for supplemental payment arrangements to three years? To what extent do the requirements of every 3 years create uncertainty in state budgets/provider payments?
Changes to financing: Which states have waivers of certain provider tax provisions that would be subject to new review? How will changes to the definition of ownership classes affect current UPL and IGT arrangements? How will the restriction of the definition of permissible IGTs affect existing arrangements?