Showing posts with label NJ FamilyCare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NJ FamilyCare. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Preparing for the great Medicaid unwinding: the case of New Jersey

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NJ FamilyCare end-of-PHE alert

The pending end of the Public Health Emergency declared by the federal government in March 2020 will trigger something of an earthquake among Medicaid enrollees.  

As of May of this year, enrollment in Medicaid and CHIP had increased by 18.3 million -- 26% -- since February 2020, the last month unaffected by the pandemic. Some 90 million Americans, well more than a quarter of the population, are now enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP.  That increase is mostly due to a moratorium on disenrollments enacted in March 2020 as part of the Families First Coronavirus Response act, which conditioned a 6.2% increase in the federal government's share of each state's Medicaid costs on implementing the moratorium (all states complied).  The Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) estimates that 84% of the enrollment increase during the pandemic is attributable to the moratorium.

Monday, July 11, 2022

New Jersey enacts an easy enrollment program for the uninsured

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New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy today signed a bill  (A674/S1646) establishing an "easy enrollment" program for health insurance, the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance announced this afternoon (a press release just arrived by email; I can't find it online yet). Update! - here it is.

Maryland pioneered "check the box" programs like this, in which the state prompts uninsured residents to indicate an interest in getting insured and provides help (to the extent creaky state bureaucracies can manage it) with getting an application started. Here is the guts of the initiative in New Jersey:

Through this program, uninsured and underinsured residents can indicate their interest in coverage for themselves or a household member on their tax return or through unemployment insurance benefit claims, which will be shared with the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance.    

As required by the legislation, the department will create a system to analyze the data collected through tax returns and unemployment benefit claims to determine a resident’s eligibility for health insurance coverage and ability to receive financial help through Get Covered New Jersey and proactively connect with qualifying residents to help them enroll. The law also permits the department to work with the Department of Human Services to determine an individual’s eligibility for NJ FamilyCare and share data with the agency for that assessment.       

Several things to note here. First, the prompt to seek health insurance will appear not only on the tax return but on an unemployment benefit claim. The latter is very important, as it comes at a moment when the applicant's income has dropped dramatically, qualifying many for Medicaid. In states that have enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion (e.g., New Jersey), eligibility is based on monthly income (currently $1563 for an individual, $3,191 for a family of four). During the pandemic, Kentucky had the Dept. of uninsurance pass applicant data to the state Medicaid agency, helping to drive a 14% increase in Medicaid enrollment from February to July 2020.

Second, the department collecting the data will share the data with the Dept. of Banking and Insurance, which runs the state ACA exchange (GetCoveredNJ), and with the Dept. of Human Services, which runs NJ FamilyCare, the state Medicaid program. The departments can determine eligibility for NJ FamilyCare or for subsidized marketplace coverage, if the enrollee gives permission for the various departments to share information. The bill statement emphasizes interagency coordination:

The bill requires the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance, in coordination with the Commissioner of Human Services, the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development, and the State Treasurer to develop and implement systems, policies, and practices that encourage, facilitate, and streamline determination of eligibility for insurance affordability assistance and enrollment in minimum essential coverage to achieve the purposes of the program.

Finally, because New Jersey (unlike Maryland) is one of a handful of states that implemented a state individual mandate to obtain insurance after the federal mandate penalty was zeroed out, the uninsured tax filer has a strong incentive to check the box, as obtaining insurance will get the penalty for going uninsured waived. For most respondents, obtaining coverage should be either free or very low-cost. In New Jersey's ACA marketplace, supplemental state subsidies, in concert with the major federal boosts to marketplace subsidies provided by the American Rescue Plan Act (which will expire at the end of this year unless Democrats manage to extend them, benchmark silver coverage with strong Cost Sharing Reduction is effectively free, or very close to it, at incomes up to 200% of the Federal Poverty Level ($25,760 for an individual, $53,000 for a family of four). 

This is a good strong bill that should reduce the uninsured population in New Jersey, currently just shy of 700,000. Its impact will be blunted somewhat if Democrats fail to extend the ARPA marketplace subsidies. But its chief impact will probably be in Medicaid in any case, which is unaffected by the level of marketplace subsidization.

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Friday, June 25, 2021

In NJ Spotlight News: "Affordable Care or a Loan?"

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I have an op-ed in NJ Spotlight News in support of a pending bill, A1023/S885, that would end Medicaid Estate Recovery pursued against enrollees in NJ FamilyCare (the state Medicaid program) who do not receive long-term care. The problem:

Unfortunately, in New Jersey — as in 19 other states and Washington, D.C. — efforts to make affordable coverage available to all come with a giant asterisk.

Applicants seeking health coverage on GetCoveredNJ, the state ACA exchange launched last fall, are routed either to the private plan marketplace or, if their family income is below 138% of the FPL (federal poverty level) — which is $1,482 for an individual, $3,048 for a family of four — to NJ FamilyCare, the state Medicaid program. If income qualifies an applicant for the latter, she must sign off on this disclosure:

Monday, October 12, 2020

Job losses and the uninsured rate in the pandemic: A one-state snapshot

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Let's try a somewhat ambiguous one-state snapshot -- in New Jersey, my home state --  of the extent to which ACA programs may have blunted an increase in the uninsured population during the months when Covid-19 triggered huge increases in unemployment. 

According to the New Jersey Department of Labor, job losses due to the pandemic peaked at about 835,500 and stood at 426,110 as of August. Estimates of the ratio between the number of people losing jobs and the number losing insurance vary quite a bit, and the ratio probably varies quite a bit by state, depending on the types of jobs lost. The pandemic created novel conditions, in which a fair number of workers were furloughed and were able to keep their job-based insurance, at least for a while. 

In New Jersey, as in most states that enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion, Medicaid is the primary safety net for the newly uninsured.  Enrollees rendered eligible by the expansion -- adults with incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level -- are driving rapid growth in Medicaid enrollment in the state. Here's the story since February: 

Medicaid Enrollment Growth in New Jersey in the Pandemic

Coverage group

Feb 2020

Sept 2020

Increase Feb-Sept

% increase Feb-Sep

ACA expansion adults

    510,850

   597,002

  86,152

16.9%

Non-ABD children

    773,544

   835,543

  61,999

 8.0%

All Medicaid

1,682,621

1,853,928

171,307

10.2%

Source: NJ FamilyCare Monthly Enrollment Statistics