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Two Medicaid-Related Initiatives That
Help Promote Long-Term Care at Home and in the Community, Rather Than in
Institutions, Are Set To Expire at the End of December
All States
and Washington D.C. Currently Utilize One or Both Initiatives
Two
initiatives that for years have helped shift Medicaid enrollees away from
nursing homes in favor of long-term care at home and in the community face
year-end deadlines that could undercut that trend, according to two new KFF
issue briefs. While there does not appear to be substantive disagreement over
the initiatives like there is with many other federal health programs, their
expiration is coming at a time when Congress is engaged in a contentious
budget debate with other competing demands.
Funding
for Medicaid’s Money Follows the Person (MFP) demonstration,
which has served more than 90,000 people in 44 states since 2007, is set to
expire on December 31. The program provides states with enhanced federal
matching funds for services and supports needed to help seniors and people
with disabilities transition from institutional care to community-based care.
Absent
a reauthorization by Congress, KFF surveys show that nine of the 44 states
will have exhausted their current funds by the end of this year, and the vast
majority of the remaining states expect to run out of money for the program
during 2020. Fifteen states report a range of services, activities and staff
positions that they expect to discontinue, including services such as
community case management, housing relocation assistance and family caregiver
training.
The
second brief examines the implications of a
pending change to “spousal impoverishment” rules in Medicaid that allow
married couples to protect a portion of their income and assets should one
spouse seek Medicaid coverage for long-term care, so that the other spouse
still has adequate resources to meet their needs. A provision of the
Affordable Care Act that requires state Medicaid programs to apply such rules
to home and community-based long-term care is set to expire at the end of
December.
That
could tip the balance of financial incentives toward institutional care, to
which the rules would still apply, and affect the efforts that states have
made through waivers to expand access to home and community-based services
(HCBS), the brief explains. Following a decades-long shift, the majority of
Medicaid long-term services and supports spending now goes toward HCBS
instead of institutional care. Medicaid spent $167 billion on long-term
services and supports in 2016, with 57 percent on HCBS.
If
Congress does not extend the ACA provision, states would still have the
option to continue applying the spousal impoverishment rule to at least some
enrollees in HCBS. However, a KFF survey finds that at least 14 states expect
the expiration of the ACA provision to have an effect on Medicaid enrollees
who are receiving such services.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is
a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California.
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Monday, November 25, 2019
Two Medicaid-Related Initiatives That Help Promote Long-Term Care at Home and in the Community, Rather Than in Institutions, Are Set To Expire at the End of December
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