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Spotlight:
Navigating Medicaid and CHIP Eligibility Renewals
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On March
31, the Medicaid continuous enrollment condition ended. This means state
Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) have resumed
full Medicaid and CHIP eligibility renewals and begun terminating
coverage for individuals who are no longer eligible.
Enrollment assisters and outreach workers play key roles in
helping tribal Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries through the unwinding
process to make sure there are no gaps in health care coverage.
Enrollment through Medicaid, CHIP, or the Marketplace provides greater
access to services and results in more resources for tribal health
programs by saving purchased and referred care dollars.
To better assist Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries, CMS has
created many resources, including the Anticipated 2023 State Timelines
for Initiating Unwinding-Related Renewals as of February 24, 2023
(PDF, 93 KB, 2 pp).
For the most current information about Medicaid and CHIP renewal
processes, we encourage all enrollment assisters and outreach workers to
check state Medicaid websites and visit CMS's webpage on Medicaid and
CHIP coverage renewals. Additionally, you can access tribal-specific resources and
tools related to unwinding online.
When
communicating with Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries, please include the
following three key messages:
- Update your contact
information – Make sure the state Medicaid agency or CHIP
program has your current mailing address, phone number, email
address, or other contact information so they can contact you about
your Medicaid or CHIP renewal
- Check your mail – State Medicaid
agencies or CHIP programs will mail you a letter about your Medicaid
or CHIP coverage
- Complete your renewal
form (if you get one) – Fill out the form and return it to the state
Medicaid agency or CHIP program right away to help avoid a gap in
your Medicaid or CHIP coverage
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Enrollment assisters and outreach workers play key roles
in helping tribal Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries navigate the unwinding
process.
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If you
are or will be assisting Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries with the
continuous enrollment process, please review the updated communications
toolkit, Medicaid and CHIP Continuous
Enrollment Unwinding (PDF, 3.2 MB, 21 pp).
Additionally,
check out the Medicaid Unwinding Toolkit
Supporting Materials (ZIP, 47 MB). These materials include
important information and resources to help inform people with Medicaid
or CHIP about steps they must take to renew their coverage or, if they
are no longer eligible for Medicaid or CHIP, to find other health care
coverage through the Marketplace or Medicare.
People
who no longer qualify for Medicaid or CHIP should be advised to visit HealthCare.gov to
find out if they are eligible to enroll in a Marketplace plan. Let them
know they may be able to purchase a health plan through the Marketplace
while receiving help to pay for it. Four out of five enrollees can find
plans that cost less than $10 a month and offer coverage for prescription
drugs, visits with a health care provider, urgent care, and more.
Individuals
whose Medicaid or CHIP eligibility has ended should be encouraged to
enroll in a Marketplace plan as soon as possible to avoid a gap in their
health care coverage. For more information, visit HealthCare.gov or
contact the Marketplace at (800) 318–2596.
Special
protections, such as zero or limited cost-sharing, apply to members of
federally recognized tribes and Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
(ANCSA) corporation shareholders in the Marketplace. For more information
about those special protections, please download Health Coverage Options for
American Indians and Alaska Natives (PDF, 195 KB, 10 pp).
You may
meet people who were covered by Medicaid until recently but did not
enroll in Medicare when they first became Medicare-eligible. Please let
them know about the six-month Medicare special enrollment period, which
allows them to sign up for Medicare without paying a late enrollment
penalty. More information on Medicare enrollment and coverage can be
found at Medicare.gov.
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Connecting
Kids to Coverage HEALTHY KIDS
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On March
30, CMS announced the Connecting Kids to Coverage (CKC) HEALTHY KIDS
American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) 2023 Outreach and Enrollment
Cooperative Agreements grantees. Over $5.9 million in funding was awarded
to the following tribal and urban Indian health programs in six states:
- All Nations Health Center
in Montana
- The Chickasaw Nation in
Oklahoma
- Choctaw Nation of
Oklahoma
- Denver Indian Health and
Family Services, Inc., in Colorado
- Fallon Paiute-Shoshone
Tribe in Nevada
- Indian Health Board of
Minneapolis, Inc., in Minnesota
- Indian Health Council,
Inc., in California
The CKC outreach and enrollment
grants provide funding to reduce the number of AI/AN
children who are eligible for, but not enrolled in, Medicaid and the
Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and to improve retention of
eligible children who are enrolled in the programs.
This funding will support innovative outreach strategies
aimed at:
- Increasing the enrollment
and retention of eligible AI/AN children, parents, and pregnant
individuals in Medicaid and CHIP
- Educating families about
the availability of free or low-cost health coverage under Medicaid
and CHIP
- Identifying children
likely to be eligible for these programs
- Assisting families with
the application and renewal process during the COVID-19 public
health emergency unwinding period
Grantees will provide outreach by:
- Partnering with tribal
programs that work with children and families
- Engaging schools and
other programs serving young people in outreach, enrollment, and
retention activities
- Establishing and
developing application assistance resources to provide high quality,
reliable Medicaid/CHIP enrollment and renewal services in local
communities
- Using social media to
conduct virtual outreach and enrollment assistance
- Using parent mentors and
community outreach workers to assist families with enrolling in
Medicaid and CHIP, retaining coverage, and finding resources for
addressing social determinants of health

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Share this ad in your newsletter or on your website. For
more information, please visit CMS’s Outreach and Education Resources
page.
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Public service announcements
Share these brief audio clips and videos, available in
Native languages and English, on your local radio station, website, and
Facebook page.
Audio clips
Videos
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Brochures about health care coverage

Access these resources online at your convenience:
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April
is National Minority Health Month
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This
year, the theme of National Minority Health Month is Better Health Through Better
Understanding, which highlights the importance of health
literacy.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is
committed to the long-term goal of eliminating health disparities,
achieving health equity, and attaining health literacy.
One way to promote health literacy is to help patients
feel more comfortable about asking questions and talking openly.
To that end, the IHS Health Literacy Workgroup recommends
health care providers use the Let's TALK approach
during every patient encounter. The approach sets the stage for
patients to:
- Tell providers what is
going on
- Ask what can be done
about it
- Learn from providers
about where to get more information
- Act on this information
to Keep
healthy
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Online
suicide prevention training for rural communities
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SafeSide
Prevention has partnered with the University of Rochester Medicine
Recovery Center of Excellence to offer online suicide prevention
training for service providers in rural communities.
The training includes a half-day interactive workshop,
followed by one year of ongoing support in the form of:
- A weekly newsletter
- Monthly Q&A video
calls
- An
online discussion forum
Service providers may opt to attend the May 23 or July 25
workshop. Both workshops will begin at 12 p.m. Eastern. Workshop
content will highlight issues specific to youth, substance use, and
tribal communities.
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Targeted violence and terrorism prevention
Deadline: April 25
View the targeted violence and
terrorism prevention funding opportunity
Department of Homeland Security funds are available to
support online, in-person, and hybrid programs that address the threat of
violence in virtual and or physical spaces.
Approximately
35–38 grants will be awarded for a two-year performance period. Tribes
are encouraged to apply.
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Tribal home visiting program cooperative agreements
The
Administration for Children and Families, Office of Early Childhood
Development, is offering two types of cooperative agreements to fund
evidence-based home visiting programs for expectant families and families
with young children.
- The
development/implementation
cooperative agreements are intended for tribes,
tribal organizations, and urban Indian organizations (UIOs) that do
not have prior experience implementing evidence-based home visiting
programs and are not currently implementing such a program.
- Approximately
16 development/implementation cooperative agreements will be awarded
for a 63-month performance period. The deadline to apply is May 1.
- The
implementation/expansion
cooperative agreements are intended for tribes,
tribal organizations, and UIOs that currently operate evidence-based
home visiting programs.
- Approximately
28 implementation/expansion cooperative agreements will be awarded
for a five-year performance period. The deadline to apply is May 31.
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USDA grants to increase access to fresh local food
Deadline: May 2
Two U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) programs are
offering grants for projects to help increase consumer access to fresh
local food and develop new market opportunities for farmers and other
agricultural businesses.
Tribal governments are eligible to apply.
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Indian Health Service Webinars
Sponsored
by the Indian Health Service (IHS) Tele-Behavioral Health Center of
Excellence, the IHS tele-education webinars
listed below are intended for health care team members.
Autism
Awareness Month webinar (12 p.m. Eastern)
April 12:
American Indian/Alaska Native Parents of Children with Autism Panel
Trauma
& stress disorders webinar series (12 p.m. Eastern)
April 25:
Treating PTSD within the Criminal Justice System
May 9:
Impact on Attachment in Individuals with a History of Trauma
May 23:
PTSD & Telehealth Considerations
Child
and adolescent behavioral health webinar series (2 p.m. Eastern)
April 27:
The Importance of Screening for Autism Spectrum Disorder and Use of the
M-CHAT
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NCUIH webinars on urban Indian HIV care
National
Council of Urban Indian Health (NCUIH) is hosting an interactive webinar
series, titled Nurturing the Three Sisters:
Community, Culture, Connection in Urban Indian HIV Care.
Dates
and topics of upcoming webinars are listed below. Each webinar will begin
at 2 p.m. Eastern.
April
12: Growing Strong Together:
Creating 2SLGBTQIA+ Inclusive Health Care Services
June 8:
Branching Out: Wellness Programming for Patient-Centered HIV Care from an
Urban Indian Perspective
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Virtual CMS ITU Outreach and Education Trainings
CMS is
committed to helping the Indian Health Service, tribal health programs,
and urban Indian programs (ITU) maximize their ability to access
third-party resources. To meet this objective, each year CMS holds
trainings on pertinent topics to educate ITU staff and help them meet the
needs of the patients they serve.
Online registration
opens 30 days prior to each ITU training. Once registration is open,
detailed information about the training will be available, along with a
link to access and print all training materials.
Upcoming
Virtual ITU Trainings by IHS Area
Albuquerque: Weeks of April 17 and 24
California:
Weeks of May 15 and 22
Great Plains:
Weeks of June 5 and 12
Nashville:
Weeks of June 19 and 26 (mornings)
Bemidji:
Weeks of June 19 and 26 (afternoons)
Oklahoma:
Weeks of July 10 and 17
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29th AAIP Cross Cultural Medicine Workshop
April
28–29
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Register for the AAIP workshop
"The
Power of Being Your Authentic Self" is the theme of this year's
Association of American Indian Physicians (AAIP) Cross Cultural Medicine
Workshop. The workshop will be facilitated by elders, traditional
healers, knowledge bearers, and Indigenous experts. Medical students,
hospital/clinic staff, counselors, program staff, and other health care
professionals are invited to attend.
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NIHB National Tribal Health Conference
May
1–5
Anchorage, Alaska
Register for the NIHB National
Tribal Health Conference
This
year, the National Indian Health Board (NIHB) will consolidate its two
national conferences into one weeklong event with the theme “Culture
Heals. Culture Knows. Culture Leads.” Tribal leaders, public health
professionals, policy specialists, advocates, and allies are encouraged
to attend.
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NCUIH Annual Conference
May
15–18
Washington, DC
Register for the NCUIH Annual
Conference
The
theme of this year's National Council of Urban Indian Health (NCUIH)
Annual Conference is "Honoring Our Ancestors & Preparing for the
Next Seven Generations: NCUIH Celebrates 25 Years of Health
Leadership." Attendees may choose to attend in person or virtually.
In-person attendees will have the option of purchasing a 25th anniversary
throw blanket.
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Contact
us
Do you have news
to share? Send it to coveringic@kauffmaninc.com
for possible inclusion in an upcoming newsletter. Contact us with other
comments or feedback, too.
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About
the newsletter
Covering Indian
Country is published by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) Division of Tribal Affairs to share resources, success stories, and
best practices with the people who connect tribal communities to health
care coverage.
Download Adobe
Reader for the best reading experience with PDF files.
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