Medicaid Enrollment Plummets Under New Rule
By News Staff
2/16/2007
The study reviewed Medicaid enrollment in Wisconsin, Kansas, Iowa, Louisiana, Virginia and New Hampshire. It found that, since implementation of the new requirement, two types of problems have surfaced:
- Medicaid enrollment is denied or coverage is terminated because some applicants and beneficiaries cannot produce citizenship and proof-of-identity documents and
- states are grappling with a backlog of applications as a result of the extra time needed to obtain required documents or because eligibility workers are overloaded with new tasks associated with administering the new requirement.
Family physicians may see some fallout as patients who qualify for Medicaid based on income are denied coverage when they apply for first-time or renewed eligibility, said Diana Ewert, AAFP senior manager of state government relations.
"It's possible some may present to their physician's office and say they've applied for Medicaid," said Ewert. But if that application is denied after care is provided, "it's possible that physicians will be treating people and not be compensated for that care."
The KHPA agrees. "We anticipate hospital emergency rooms and other health care providers will bear some of the costs associated with uninsured applicants -- especially for pregnant women who have been unable to enroll in Medicaid," says a KHPA fact sheet (PDF file: 3 pages / 56 KB. More about PDFs.) on the effects of the new requirement.
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