STATEMENT & FAST FACTS
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
Contact: CMS Media Relations
January 27,
2015
(202) 690-6145 | press@cms.hhs.gov
CMS and Indiana Agree on Medicaid
Expansion
CMS
Administrator Marilyn Tavenner and HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell issued the following statement today
after Indiana became the 28th state – plus the District of Columbia – to expand
Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.
“With
today’s agreement, Indiana will become the 28th state, plus the District of
Columbia, to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. This agreement will
bring much needed access to health care coverage to an estimated 350,000
uninsured low-income Hoosiers over the next three years,” said CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner.
“HHS and CMS are committed to working with states to design programs uniquely
their own, while maintaining essential health benefits guaranteed under the
Affordable Care Act and other key consumer protections consistent with the
law.”
“I
continue to be encouraged by interest from governors from all across the
country who want to bring health care coverage to low-income people in their
states by expanding Medicaid. They understand both the economic benefits of
Medicaid expansion and the health and financial security it brings to their
residents,” said HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell. “The Administration will continue to
work with governors interested in expanding Medicaid to devise approaches that
work for their states while keeping faith with the law’s goals and consumer
protections.”
The
expansion is paid for with 100 percent federal funds through 2016. Federal
funding rates gradually decline beginning in 2017, but never fall below 90
percent of costs.
Fast Facts on Healthy Indiana Plan:
Beneficiaries will begin to have access to quality,
affordable coverage with the essential benefits guaranteed by law beginning on
February 1, 2015 for eligible individuals.
Indiana’s plan establishes POWER Accounts, which
beneficiaries will use to pay for some of beneficiaries’ health care expenses. These accounts will be funded, in
part, through beneficiary contributions.
Beneficiaries will have access to all of the essential
health benefits that are required under the law. The agreement allows two benefit
packages (HIP Plus and HIP Basic), each covering all essential health benefits
required by law and available to people based on their premium (POWER Account)
contributions.
Individuals who are charged premiums (in the form of
POWER account contributions) will enroll in HIP Plus and have no other cost
sharing, expect for certain emergency room services. These individuals will also have the
opportunity to reduce their premiums through incentives like receiving
preventive care or through a rollover of their POWER account. For people with
incomes at or under 100% of the federal poverty line (FPL) who elect to pay
cost-sharing rather than premiums, cost sharing will comply with regular
program limits and total cost sharing will not exceed 5 percent of the family
income.
CMS did not approve a work requirement
as part of this agreement.
Indiana will seek to encourage employment through a state-funded incentive
program that will be administered separate from the Medicaid program.
Participation in this program will not impact coverage or costs for
individuals. While states may promote employment through state programs
operated outside of the demonstration, this is not permitted under the Medicaid
program.
Co-payments for certain emergency room services to some
individuals will be allowed in connection with a study testing whether copays
encourage care in the most appropriate settings while not harming beneficiary
health. Federal
law allows waivers on cost sharing payments only based on meeting several criteria
including the presence of a control group so that the impact can be carefully
studied. Individuals who seek treatment at the emergency room will be charged
copays ($8 for the first visit, $25 for the second visit). Those assigned to a
“control” group will not be charged.
Individuals with incomes at or below 100% FPL are not
subject to a lockout of essential benefits. A person who is not medically
frail and has income above the poverty line who stops paying premiums can be
locked out of coverage for six months – reduced from 12 months in the current
Indiana plan – and subject to certain exceptions.The new demonstration shortens
the lock out period from 12 months under HIP 1.0 to six months, limits the lock
out to only people with incomes above 100% FPL who are not medically frail, and
adds additional exceptions for some individuals. For instance, individuals with
incomes at or below 100% FPL will also be given a 60-day grace period after
non-payment of premiums before being automatically enrolled in HIP Basic.
Several features of HIP 1.0 were not continued as part of
this new demonstration. These
policies would not be authorized as part of a Medicaid expansion demonstration
that, under the Affordable Care Act, triggers the enhanced federal matching funds.
This agreement does not permit:
- Capped enrollment;
- Premium payments as a condition of eligibility for people with incomes below the federal poverty level; and
- Premium payments in excess of 2 percent of income.
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