March, 2017 Brian Colby, Special Projects Director - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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March, 2017 Brian Colby, Special Projects Director - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

March, 2017 Brian Colby, Special Projects Director bcolby@mobudget.org FY 2017 State Budget FY 2018 State Budget General Revenue $9.489 billion Medicaid Makes Sense **Eligibility limits shown as a percent of the Federal Poverty Level 1000000


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March, 2017 Brian Colby, Special Projects Director bcolby@mobudget.org

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FY 2017 State Budget

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FY 2018 State Budget

General Revenue $9.489 billion

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Medicaid Makes Sense

**Eligibility limits shown as a percent of the Federal Poverty Level

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Primary Driver for Enrollment Growth is Kids

200000 400000 600000 800000 1000000 1200000 Feb-2008 Jun-2008 Oct-2008 Feb-2009 Jun-2009 Oct-2009 Feb-2010 Jun-2010 Oct-2010 Feb-2011 Jun-2011 Oct-2011 Feb-2012 Jun-2012 Oct-2012 Feb-2013 Jun-2013 Oct-2013 Feb-2014 Jun-2014 Oct-2014 Feb-2015 Jun-2015 Oct-2015 Feb-2016 Jun-2016 Oct-2016 Pregnant Women Children Custodial Parents Elderly Persons with Disabilities

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Medicaid Makes Sense

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Medicaid Makes Sense

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American Health Care Act

  • It does not repeal the ACA but changes it.
  • Budget Reconciliation only allows items

dealing with the budget

  • Budget Reconciliation is necessary to move

through the Senate with 51 votes

  • It still fundamentally changes the Medicaid

program from an entitlement program to something different.

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What the AHCA does not change

  • covering preexisting conditions;
  • guaranteeing availability and

renewability of coverage;

  • covering adult children up to age 26;
  • capping out-of-pocket expenditures
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Protections Remain

The ACA’s prohibitions against

  • health status underwriting;
  • lifetime and annual limits; and
  • discrimination on the basis of race, nationality,

disability, age, or sex are still in place.

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What is Repealed for Private Individual Market Requirements?

  • They do repeal the ACA’s actuarial value

requirements

  • And replaces the ACA’s three to one age ratio

limit with a five-to-one ratio.

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CBO Estimate

  • Federal Medicaid spending cut by $880 billion or 17.6 percent
  • ver the next ten years,
  • reduction in federal funding for the Medicaid expansion and

conversion of Medicaid to a per capita cap.

  • By 2026, the annual cut in federal spending would rise to $155

billion, a reduction of 24.8 percent, relative to current law.

  • the number of Medicaid beneficiaries would fall by 14 million

in 2026. Most of those losing Medicaid would likely end up uninsured.

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Enhanced Match Phased Out

  • 90% matched rolled back to standard match

rate increasing costs to state for expansion population

  • 7 states will drop expansion automatically

due to triggers in their expansion legislation

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Reinsurance and Market Stabilization

  • The bill includes a complicated reinsurance funding program

for the states.

  • It is funded with Federal funds that are distributed on the

basis of aggregated claims data.

  • It is optional to the states
  • The funding mechanism phases out over time to require a

50% state match by 2027 to maintain the program.

  • This could have a significant impact on insurance rates

especially for Missourians 50-64 years old.

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Replacing The Individual Mandate With A Continuous Coverage Requirement

  • The individual mandate penalties eliminated
  • The employer mandate penalties eliminated
  • Individuals must prove that they did not have a gap in

creditable coverage of at least 63 continuous days during the 12 months preceding coverage;

  • A 30% premium surcharge as a penalty is assessed if you

lapsed coverage

  • Individuals aging out of dependent coverage must prove that

they enrolled during the first open enrollment period after which dependent coverage ceased.

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Tax Credit vs Subsidy

  • The bill creates a new age-adjusted tax credit

available for individuals purchasing insurance in the individual market beginning in 2020.

  • the tax credit is refundable and advanceable
  • n a monthly basis to pay for individual

market premiums.

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The new plan proposes:

  • The annual tax credit amount is established at:
  • $2,000 for an individual under 30,
  • $2500 for those age 30 to 39,
  • $3,000 for those age 40 to 49;
  • $3,500 for those age 50 to 59,
  • $4,000 for those age 60 and over.
  • The tax credit begins to phase out when a taxpayer’s

modified adjusted gross income reaches $75,000 ($150,000 for joint filers) adjusted annually by the consumer price index plus one percentage point for inflation after 2020

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Cost Sharing Reduction

  • The bill repeals the ACA’s cost-sharing

reduction provisions after 2019. These provisions currently reduce out-of-pocket limits and increase the actuarial value of coverage for individuals with incomes below 250 percent of the federal poverty level. The repeal of these provisions would result in dramatically higher deductibles and other cost-sharing for these low-income individuals.

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Repeals Revenue

  • The bill repeals revenues on high income earners

and corporations that paid for the ACA.

  • The ACA was paid for by taxes on the health care

industry, high income earners and savings to the Medicare program.

  • Most of those revenues are repealed and

replaced with reductions in coverage

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Questions about Kids Coverage

  • By 2026, CBO projects that 36 million children will be

enrolled in Medicaid. Here are some questions that need to be answered for America’s children before this proposal moves further:

  • How much of the $880 billion in Medicaid cuts will fall
  • n children and the providers that now treat them?
  • What will happen to high-cost children with

disabilities?

  • What effect will the cap have on their EPSDT benefits?
  • How will it affect the amount states pay their providers

for furnishing covered services?

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More Questions

  • How will states be able to absorb price shocks from necessary

drugs like EpiPen if federal Medicaid funding is capped?

  • Will children’s hospitals and other centers of excellence be

able to continue to serve their all children in their communities?

  • How would the $880 billion in Medicaid cuts be distributed

among the states?

  • Would some states and their residents be hit harder than
  • thers?
  • What happens to children in states with low per capita

spending in 2016?

  • Are those states locked into their low spending base in

perpetuity?

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What about Medically Complex Kids

Today, Medicaid covers 10.2 million adults and children with serious illnesses or disabilities whose health needs create significant financial burden for patients and their families. For example:

  • Medicaid pays for physical therapy, occupational therapy and

speech therapy that children with cerebral palsy and other developmental disabilities may receive through school.

  • Medicaid covers private-duty nursing and assistive technology —

such as ventilators, feedings tubes and communication devices — that children with disabilities may need to attend school and avoid placement in institutional settings.

  • Medicaid frequently fills in coverage gaps for privately insured

children with disabilities since over one-third of insured children with disabilities report inadequate coverage.

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Opposing the New Proposal

  • American Medical Association, AMA
  • AARP
  • American Hospital Association
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Connect with organizations working on your issues:

  • Visit websites – information
  • Sign up for email updates – action alerts
  • Connect on Social Media

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