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Chapter 10 Medicaid. What Is It?  Federal assistance program—not insurance—for medical care  Coverage depends on each state.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 10 Medicaid. What Is It?  Federal assistance program—not insurance—for medical care  Coverage depends on each state."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 10 Medicaid

2 What Is It?  Federal assistance program—not insurance—for medical care  Coverage depends on each state

3 Who Qualifies?  Categorically needy  Low income with few resources  Families with dependent children eligible for Social Security Income  Pregnant women with low income, children

4 o Medically needy  High medical expenses, low financial resources, but not low enough for cash assistance  Aged, blind, disabled—low income higher than poverty level  Children meeting TANF limits  Pregnant women not meeting other federal qualifications, but who meet state income limits

5 Programs Qualifying for Medicaid  CHIP (children’s health insurance program) low income, but not low enough to be “needy” funded jointly by state and federal governments

6 EPSDT (early, periodic screening, diagnosis, and treatment)  For people under 21 enrolled in Medicaid  Preventive care and immunizations  Physicals  Vision, hearing, dental  Periodic screenings

7 Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act  Incentive program for people on SSI to return to work “Go to work and lose your medical benefits”

8 New Freedom Initiative Governments working with states to help people with disabilities to participate in communities. Prevent “locking away” theory Grant money provided for programs

9 Spousal Impoverishment Protection (Joint Resources) Limits how much of a couple’s resources have to be used up before they can qualify for Medicaid Often one is in a nursing facility or medical institution

10 Welfare Reform Act TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families)  Income and resources are below limits  Household has at least one child under 18  At least one parent is not present, unemployed, or incapacitated  Must have SSN and birth certificate  May receive adoptive or foster care assistance TANF qualifications determined by county

11 State Programs  Federal government sets broad standards, but Medicaid is run by the state  States establish their own eligibility standards  Federal funding depends on programs offered by each state

12 Medically Needy  High medical expenses, low financial resources  Each state decides who is covered  Aged, blind, disabled  Institutionalized or who would be but are being cared for at home  Under 21 on TANF  Infants and pregnant women not qualifying for federal  State supplementary recipients  People with TB financially eligible for Medicaid  Uninsured women needing breast or cervical cancer tx

13 People Qualifying for Medically Needy:  May have a reasonable income from employment  Assets taken into account for eligibility  not homes being lived in by recipient  Not clothing, furniture, personal effects or money put aside for burial

14 Spenddown  Recipient pays medical bills until their level of assets reach certain level determined by the state  Monthly spenddown  Recipient pays certain amount toward medical expenses each month—similar to a monthly deductible

15 Enrollment Verification  Check patient eligibility each visit  Medicaid Eligibility Verification System (electronic)  Each patient should have an active card  Often patients have to show alternate form of ID

16 Medicaid Integrity Program  Prevent and reduce fraud, waste, and abuse  False Claims Act (aka Lincoln Law)  Whistleblowing against people defrauding the government  States can enact their own act, but will not receive federal matching rates for Medicaid

17 What’s Covered?  To receive federal funding, must provide  Inpt and outpt hospital  Physician, lab, x-ray  Transportation to medical care  ESPDT for those who qualify  Skilled nursing, home healthcare  Free standing birth centers, midwife services, family planning and supplies  Pediatric

18 Some states also provide  Vision, hearing, dental  Prosthetics  Prescription drugs  Rehab  Dx services Cutbacks effect what is offered, to whom it is offered, payments to doctors

19 What is Not Included  Not medically necessary services  Clinical Trials  Experimental or investigative  Cosmetic procedures

20 Medicaid Payments  Fee-for-service—pt sees any Medicaid approved provider. Provider accepts assignment. Claims sent to Medicaid contractor.  Managed Care—pt sees network provider, PCP monitors care. Claims sent to managed care organization  Payment for Service—similar to FFS but providers CAN bill the patient for services not covered

21 Medicaid Patient Payments  No premiums  No deductibles  No coinsurance  Small copays  Possibly noncovered services if  Patient is informed (ABN)  Providers in capitation plans still bill Medicaid for reporting purposes

22 Provider May Not Bill For  Services requiring preauthorization that are denied by Medicaid  Services not medically necessary  Services not paid because of delay in sending claim

23 Third-party Liability  Medicaid is “payer of last resort”  Billing Priorities 1. Liability 2. Group 3. Self subscriber 4. Medicare or Tricare/CHAMPVA 5. Medicaid

24 Medi-Medi Plans  Dual Eligible  Crossover Claims  Medicare adjudicates the claim first, then Medicaid adjudicates Who would qualify for a Medi-Medi claim?

25 Filing Claims  Send to state-appointed contractor  Primarily send electronically (HIPAA 837P)  Medi-Medi claims are sent once  Medicaid denied claims can be appealed through state’s contractor

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