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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Ortiz y Pino
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/02/08
HM
SHORT TITLE Study Medicaid Renew Pilot Project
SM 10
ANALYST Weber
Duplicates Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Memorial 10 requests that The Human Services Department;
A.
conduct an analysis of the Medicaid renew pilot project that and report how
successful the pilot project has been, including the number of women, children and
low-income family Medicaid cases that are due to renew every month, the number of
renewal notices issued every month, the dates that those renewal notices are issued,
the number of families that respond every month, the dates that those families
respond, the number of renewal applications that are processed every month and the
number of cases that are denied or renewed every month;
B.
provide data showing how many women, children and low-income family Medicaid
cases are closed every month and when, if ever, they are reinstated; and
C.
refrain from terminating any Medicaid case unless and until the human services
department has determined one of the following to be true:
1.
the participant is no longer financially eligible;
2.
the participant has received notification of requirements for renewal and has
failed to meet those requirements within thirty days of notification; or
3.
the participant can no longer be reached through any reasonable measures,
including telephone, reverse postal look-up, re-mailing or checking other
applicable state data systems for a more recent address; and
D.
resolve any problems it uncovers concerning eligible Medicaid recipients
experiencing a lapse or an end to their Medicaid coverage; and
E.
report to the Interim Legislative Health and Human Services Committee and the
Interim Welfare Reform Oversight Committee and to the Legislative Finance
pg_0002
Senate Memorial 10 – Page
2
Committee on its findings and any corrective action taken in July 2008 and again in
November 2008; and
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HSD notes that the request to refrain from terminating any Medicaid case unless and until the
Department has determined the participant is no longer financially eligible; the participant has
received notification of requirements for renewal and has failed to meet those requirements
within thirty days of notification; or the participant can no longer be reached through any
reasonable measures, including telephone, reverse postal look-up, re-mailing or checking other
applicable state data systems for a more recent address. This requirement is above the federal
Medicaid requirements and would require HSD to add additional and costly administrative
procedures.
HSD cannot be certain that a participant has received notification and returned mail is often
received months after mailing. Therefore determining the 30
th
day after receipt of notification is
not possible. This then would necessitate keeping open thousands of cases of individuals who do
not receive or who do not respond timely to their recertification notice. Federal regulations
require that they be recertified at least once every twelve months. For those individuals who
move, die or do not respond for one reason or another, keeping them on would cost millions of
dollars in Medicaid managed care capitation fees and could result in repayment of millions of
dollars to the federal government as a result of audit findings.
The memorial does not make an appropriation to address the costs of doing the study. A study of
this magnitude will require a significant amount of staff time in the Medical Assistance Division
and will also likely require some data from the automated systems that support the Medicaid
Program. If this data is not readily available special queries will have to be developed, tested
and analyzed to quantify the issue and make further recommendations to the Legislature as
required.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HSD contributes the following background on the pilot project.
In October 2007, the Department implemented the Medicaid Renewal Pilot Project. It is located
in Santa Fe County and handles recertification of all children and family Medicaid cases as well
as those on Family Planning throughout the state. This project streamlines the process and
allows recipients to recertify without submitting a signed renewal application and instead may
renew in any of four ways – by letter, telephone, fax or e-mail. Members of the unit also
telephone individuals who have not returned their recertification applications to remind them or
to find if they have moved so that the Department’s address files can be updated. In just a few
short months, the number of individuals being recertified each month has increased and the
number of addresses updated is significant. The Department is and will continue to analyze this
project with or without a memorial; however, the data may not be the same requested in the
memorial. Specifically to create an additional database and administrative staff required to
separately track the dates a response is received may be difficult as this information is
maintained separately. The old ISD2 legacy eligibility system would make new data entry
requirements difficult and costly.
pg_0003
Senate Memorial 10 – Page
3
As mentioned in Fiscal Implications, the Department cannot refrain from closing cases without a
finding of ineligibility. There are those individuals who do not respond in a timely fashion so
that the case may be recertified within the required twelve month time frame. Those that do
respond timely with the appropriate information are duly determined eligible or ineligible. For
those that do not respond, the Department has no other option but to close their case after the
requisite notification.
The Pilot Project does attempt to address some of the problems causing Medicaid-eligible
individuals and families to lose coverage. Often individuals move without notifying the
Department, or the address on file was incorrectly entered. The Pilot Project phone individuals
who have not returned their applications, requests current address information and corrects
addresses on file when necessary. Individuals often forget to renew. Contact by the Pilot Project
personnel reminds them to follow-up with this process.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Health Policy Commission offers additional background.
According to the Quick Facts 2008 published by the Health Policy Commission, the number of
individuals with Medicaid coverage increased by 1.6 percent in fiscal year 2006. This is the
lowest rate of growth since 1999.
The Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, Medicaid Enrollment in 50 States: June
2006 Update, stated that in June 2006, a total of 42.7 million persons were enrolled in Medicaid
in the United States. This level of enrollment represents an increase from June 2005 of fewer
than 100,000 persons, which is an increase of only about 0.2 percent. Notably, national
Medicaid enrollment fell by nearly 60,000 individuals (or -0.1 percent) from December 2005 to
June 2006. This was the first six-month decline in Medicaid enrollment since December 1998.
In 2005, the number of people lacking health insurance increased to a record high of 46.6
million. While the rate of increase in private health insurance premiums has slowed in the last
few years, cost continues to be a factor driving down the number of people with private health
insurance. The percentage of full-time workers without health insurance increased significantly
in 2005. These trends put increased demands on Medicaid coverage.
MW/bb