In addition to
enrollment growth, other drivers of increased Medicaid spending reported
by state Medicaid agencies included inflationary pressures, increased
service utilization, and increased home and community-based services
(HCBS) spending.
The survey, conducted by analysts at KFF and Health Management
Associates, provides an annual look at Medicaid enrollment and spending
trends, currently for state fiscal years 2022 and 2023. Forty-nine states
responded to the survey, although response rates for specific questions
varied. A companion
survey report offers an in-depth, state-specific examination
of policies in place in state Medicaid programs, as well important
changes and initiatives taking place around the country.
While states continue to respond to pandemic-related health issues such
as increasing vaccination and booster rates and treating long-COVID,
states also reported actions to focus on longstanding issues and new
priorities including improving equity and reducing health disparities,
maintaining access to telehealth, improving behavioral health access and
supports, and addressing workforce challenges.
Some notable findings from the report include:
- Health Equity. Advancing health equity
is an important longstanding priority that has been elevated during
the pandemic. Two-thirds of states reported using at least one
strategy to improve race, ethnicity, and language (REL) data
completeness. About one quarter of states reported use of financial
incentives linked to health equity, mostly in Medicaid managed care
arrangements.
- Benefits: States reported far more benefit expansions
than benefit cuts in both FY 2022 and FY 2023. States are
particularly focused on service expansions across the behavioral
health care continuum as well as expansions of pregnancy and
postpartum services. Other areas of benefit expansion include
preventive services, dental services, and services to address
enrollees’ social needs (such as food and housing needs).
- Telehealth. States noted that expanded telehealth policies
increased access to care during the COVID-19 pandemic and resulted
in high telehealth utilization across populations. Most states have
implemented or are planning initiatives to assess telehealth quality
and to address other telehealth challenges (including access to
technology and broadband, program integrity, outreach and education,
and equity). Most states have or plan to adopt permanent Medicaid
telehealth policy expansions that will remain in place even after
the pandemic, though some are considering adding limitations or
guardrails.
- Managed Care. More than three
quarters of states that contract with managed care organizations
(MCOs) reported that 75 percent or more of their Medicaid
beneficiaries were enrolled in MCOs as of July 1, 2022. In FY 2022,
North Carolina implemented its first MCO program. Missouri enrolled
all ACA expansion adults in Medicaid MCOs when it implemented the
ACA Medicaid expansion in October 2021.
- Provider Rates. Provider rate increases
outnumbered rate restrictions for fee-for-service in FY 2022 and FY
2023. Increases were more common for nursing facilities and home and
community-based services (HCBS) providers than for other provider
categories. While most states rely on capitated arrangements with
managed care organizations to deliver Medicaid services,
fee-for-service rates remain important payment benchmarks for
managed care payments. Many states noted that worsening inflation
and workforce shortages driving higher labor costs were resulting in
pressure for rate increases. Some states noted that adopted FY 2023
budgets do not account for current inflation levels, though
inflation remains a concern.
- Looking Ahead. States are preparing
for challenges tied to the unwinding of the continuous enrollment
requirements and the expiration of other emergency authorities in
place during the PHE. In addition, states were facing fiscal
uncertainty due to slower revenue growth projections, rising
inflation, and workforce shortages as well as potential shifts in
political landscapes, as 36 states await the results of
gubernatorial elections in November 2022, with outcomes that could
have implications for state Medicaid policies and for Medicaid
enrollees.
The survey is to be
discussed today at Noon ET during a web
briefing held by KFF with the National Association of Medicaid
Directors. The two new reports released today in advance of the briefing
are:
For more data and
analyses about Medicaid, visit
kff.org.
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