Medicaid’s High Cost Enrollees: How Much Do They Drive Program Spending?

Published: Mar 31, 2006

This brief presents new information on the distribution of Medicaid spending for all enrollees, including those residing in institutions. The analysis finds that fewer than five percent of enrollees (each exceeding $25,000 in annual costs) account for almost half of all Medicaid spending.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Reports Explore Long-Term Care Issues Included in the Deficit Reduction Act

Published: Mar 31, 2006

The Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005, which became law this February, includes several significant changes to Medicaid long-term care policies. The Kaiser Family Foundation’s Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured is releasing five new reports on long-term care issues that were addressed by the DRA changes.

Long-term care accounts for 36 percent of Medicaid spending (over $100 billion annually) and is utilized by many of Medicaid’s most costly beneficiaries, the low-income elderly and individuals with disabilities.

Medicaid Long-Term Services Reforms in the Deficit Reduction Act

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Asset Transfer and Nursing Home Use: Empirical Evidence and Policy Significance

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Beyond Cash and Counseling: An Inventory of Individual Budget-based Community Long-Term Care Programs

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Nursing Home Transition Programs: Perspectives of State Medicaid Officials

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Home Transition Programs: Perspectives of Medicaid Care Planners

Asset Transfer and Nursing Home Use: Empirical Evidence and Policy Significance

Published: Mar 31, 2006

Asset Transfer and Nursing Home Use: Empirical Evidence and Policy Significance

Due to concern that wealthy elderly Americans were transferring assets to gain Medicaid coverage for nursing home care, the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 tightened Medicaid eligibility rules related to asset transfers. About 43 percent of all nursing home residents eventually become Medicaid eligible.

This brief concludes that for people becoming Medicaid eligible at the time of nursing home admission, 50 percent had asset (cash and deed) transfers of less than $5,000. Conversely, only 13 percent of people who became Medicaid eligible at admission transferred more than $50,000. Asset transfer patterns were most common among nursing home residents who did not receive Medicaid assistance, with over 50 percent of the group making a transfer. Over the six-year period examined, the authors estimate that, when applying the DRA asset transfer rules, federal savings to Medicaid could amount to $1.87 billion.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Home Transition Programs: Perspectives of Medicaid Care Planners

Published: Mar 31, 2006

Home Transition Programs: Perspectives of Medicaid Care Planners

This report draws on interviews with Medicaid care planners for insight into the issues that arise in establishing programs to move individuals with significant long-term care needs from institutional to community settings. The five states that participated in this study—Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey, Ohio and Washington—each received federal grants for nursing home transition activities and had varied experiences.

Report (.pdf)

Beyond Cash and Counseling: An Inventory of Individual Budget-based Community Long-Term Care Programs

Published: Mar 31, 2006

Beyond Cash and Counseling: An Inventory of Individual Budget-based Community Long-Term Care Programs

This brief describes the evolution of beneficiary-managed home and community-based services since the original demonstration and provides an overview of state activity as of January 2006. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 gives states the option to use this model for an expanded range of home and community based services in their state Medicaid plans without having to obtain a waiver.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Health Coverage for Low-Income Populations: A Comparison of Medicaid and SCHIP

Published: Mar 30, 2006

Medicaid and the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) are often compared because they both serve low-income populations. However, the populations served, the coverage offered and the structure of these programs have differed in important ways. With the passage of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, states can now apply some SCHIP-like principles to the Medicaid program. Moreover, SCHIP is due for reauthorization by Congress after fiscal year 2007.

This issue brief examines the similarities and difference between Medicaid and SCHIP as well as the implications of applying some SCHIP design features to the Medicaid program.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Source: CBS News/New York Times Poll: 1993

Published: Mar 17, 2006

Do you think the government in Washington should guarantee medical care for all people who don’t have, health insurance or isn’t this the responsibility of the government in Washington?

65% Should

27 Not government responsibility

8 Don’t know/No answer

Methodology: Conducted by CBS News/New York Times, September 16-September 19, 1993 and based on telephone interviews with a national adult sample of 1,136. Data provided by The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut.

Source: CBS News/New York Times Poll: 1992

Published: Mar 17, 2006

Do you think the government in Washington should guarantee medical care for all people who don’t have, health insurance or isn’t this the responsibility of the government in Washington?

77%  Should

17   Not government responsibility

6    Don’t know/No answer

Methodology: Conducted by CBS News/New York Times, June 17-June 20, 1992 and based on telephone interviews with a national adult sample of 1,315.   Data provided by The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut.

National ADAP Monitoring Project, Annual Report, 2006

Published: Mar 2, 2006

The National ADAP Monitoring Report, 2006 provides the latest data on state AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (ADAPs). ADAPs, authorized under Title II of the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act, provide HIV/AIDS-related prescription drugs to uninsured and underinsured individuals living with HIV/AIDS. ADAPs operate in 57 U.S. states, territories and associated jurisdictions. The report, the tenth in an annual series, was prepared by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors (NASTAD). It was released during a policy forum on March 30, 2006.

Summary and Detailed Findings (.pdf)

Full Report (including charts and appendices) (.pdf)

Key ADAP Highlights (.pdf)

ADAP Formularies (.pdf)

Medicaid Spending and Enrollment: State and National Data Update

Published: Mar 1, 2006

This series of tables provides recent data on state-by-state and national Medicaid spending and enrollment.

Using the latest federal information sources available, the first set of tables contains information on Medicaid spending by service using data from the Centers on Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) Form 64 for Federal Fiscal Year (FFY) 2004.

A second set of tables is based on analysis of a more detailed data source, the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS), which provides information on enrollment and spending per enrollee for FFY 2002. Both sets of tables were prepared for the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured by the Urban Institute.

2004 State and National Medicaid Spending Data (CMS-64)

2002 State and National Medicaid Enrollment and Spending Data (MSIS)

Overview of Differences between Data Sources (.pdf)