Survey: Adjusting to Sudden Reduction in Federal Funds, ACA
Navigators Expect to Decrease Services
New Report Compares Navigator
Funding Changes with Their Reported Performance Metrics
Many navigator organizations responsible for
helping consumers understand and sign up for health coverage in 2018
Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplaces say steep federal funding reductions
that recently took effect will likely force them to limit their geographic
service area, cut back outreach and public education, lay off staff members,
and curtail other assistance, according to a new Kaiser Family Foundation survey of such programs.
The navigators’ planned adjustments are in
response to the government’s announcement, two months before the ACA open
enrollment period, of a 41 percent overall reduction in funding for programs
in the 34 states using the federal insurance marketplace. The Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has indicated that funding for the year
beginning in fall 2017 would be based on individual programs’ performances on
enrollment goals set during the previous year.
The Foundation’s new survey compares funding
changes for navigator organizations to their reports of how they performed on
several metrics. For three quarters (77.5%) of the programs, funding changes
did not align with the most direct measure of marketplace enrollment reported
by navigators, the number of consumers assisted with qualified health plan
selection. Funding changes also appear not to align with navigators’
performances on other measures, such as one-on-one consumer interactions or
help for consumers eligible for Medicaid/CHIP, as majorities of programs
surveyed said they met or exceeded these goals. CMS may have relied on a
different, automated data source for navigator performance on marketplace
plan selections, though programs report that they do not all enter data into
that system consistently.
Overall, nearly half (49%) of the survey’s
respondents report the government didn’t provide a rationale for their
program’s funding change, while 40 percent say it was unclear and 11 percent
say it was very or somewhat clear.
In addition to the survey, the report also details
the distribution of overall funding changes by state and by program, based on
a list of preliminary awards that has become publicly available. The report
finds that navigator funding reductions were uneven across states. In three
states (Delaware, Kansas, and West Virginia), total navigator awards for the
state were unchanged. In the other 31 states, total funding reductions ranged
from 10% (North Carolina) to 80% or more (Indiana, Louisiana, and Nebraska).
Funding changes also varied widely across
navigator organizations, with 18 percent seeing an increase or no change in
funding; 33 percent seeing their funding reduced by less than half; and 49
percent seeing their funding reduced by more than half.
METHODS
The Kaiser Family Foundation conducted an online
survey of FFM navigator programs from Sept. 22 - Oct. 4, 2017. All 94
continuing programs from 34 FFM states were invited to participate.
Forty-eight programs from 32 states completed the survey, for a response rate
of 51 percent.
Additionally, on Sept. 15, 2017, the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation and Kaiser Family Foundation co-hosted a navigator
roundtable meeting. More than 40 navigators participated and discussed
strategies for open enrollment and 2017 funding awards.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the
Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit organization based in Menlo Park,
California.
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To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Survey: Adjusting to Sudden Reduction in Federal Funds, ACA Navigators Expect to Decrease Services
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