PA Health Law Project Issues Newsletter

The Pennsylvania Health Law Project has released its latest newsletter.
Among the issues addressed in the letter are the prospects for Medicaid expansion in Pennsylvania and increased state oversight of the state’s private Medicaid managed care organizations.  The newsletter also describes an effort by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to encourage all qualified health plans offered through health insurance exchanges to include “essential community providers” in their provider networks.
Find the newsletter here, on the web site of the Pennsylvania Health Law Project.

2013-06-20T06:00:15+00:00June 20th, 2013|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on PA Health Law Project Issues Newsletter

Administration Identifies Medicaid Expansion Obstacles

Corbett administration officials took advantage of a recent public briefing on Medicaid expansion to explain that the governor wants to expand the state’s Medicaid program but is seeking flexibility in how to do so that the Obama administration will not provide.
In particular, the administration wants to establish work requirements for new recipients, adjust benefits, and carve out a greater role for private health insurers.
The administration continues to negotiate these and other Medicaid expansion-related issues with federal officials.
Read more about the issues that the Corbett administration is attempting to address and the response of advocates of Medicaid expansion in this Harrisburg Patriot-News articleHarrisburg, PA capital building.

2013-06-17T06:00:07+00:00June 17th, 2013|Health care reform, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Administration Identifies Medicaid Expansion Obstacles

DPW Says Fiscal Office Understates Cost of Medicaid Expansion

The Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare has released a letter it sent to the state’s Independent Fiscal Office (IFO) rejecting many of the assumptions underlying the latter’s analysis of the cost of expanding Medicaid eligibility in the state and stating that as a result of these incorrect assumptions, the IFO has significantly understated the cost of Medicaid expansion in Pennsylvania.
According to the letter sent by acting DPW secretary Beverly Mackereth to IFO director Matthew Knittel, the IFO inaccurately characterizes the baseline year during which to account for potential costs and savings; incorrectly maintains that upfront costs – including hiring 2000 new workers at higher salaries than the IFO projects – will be less than savings; and overstates savings associated with increased federal matching funds for General Assistance recipients.
DPW also maintains in the letter that the IFO incorrectly assumes that new enrollment will take place gradually instead of  fairly quickly once expansion begins; underestimates the number of new “woodwork” enrollees – individuals already eligible for Medicaid who will enroll in the program because of all the attention the eligibility expansion will receive; and prematurely assumes continued income from the gross receipts tax on Medicaid managed care organizations before the federal government has had an opportunity to decide whether the state will be permitted to continue levying that tax.
Read about the letter in this Philadelphia Business Journal article or download the letter itself here.

2013-05-22T06:00:40+00:00May 22nd, 2013|Pennsylvania Medicaid policy, Pennsylvania state budget issues, Uncategorized|Comments Off on DPW Says Fiscal Office Understates Cost of Medicaid Expansion

Medicaid Expansion Would Save PA Money, Report Says

Expanding Pennsylvania’s Medicaid program as provided for under the Affordable Care Act would increase federal spending in the state by $3.2 billion, save the state $220 million a year, and increase tax revenue another $215 million a year, according to a new analysis by the state’s Independent Fiscal Office.
The projected savings and spending cover the years 2016 through 2021.
The Independent Fiscal Office was created in 2010 to develop revenue projections and analyze fiscal, economic, and budget issues.
Find links to the report, a press release, and a fact sheet here, on the Independent Fiscal Office’s web site.

2013-04-30T09:18:45+00:00April 30th, 2013|Health care reform, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Medicaid Expansion Would Save PA Money, Report Says

Hospitals Weigh Potential Impact of Medicaid Expansion in PA

Medicaid expansion in Pennsylvania could help compensate hospitals for the care they are currently providing to uninsured patients.
And enhanced Medicaid payments made possible under the Affordable Care Act also could help hospitals with their Medicaid shortfalls:  the difference between what Pennsylvania pays hospitals for the Medicaid services they provide and the actual cost of those services.
So hospital executives around the state recently told the Johnstown Tribune-Democrat.
To learn more about how selected hospital executives view Medicaid expansion and why the Corbett administration has been reluctant so far to go ahead with that expansion, read the article “Small hospitals could gain from expansion” in this Johnstown Tribune-Democrat article.
 

2013-03-19T06:00:38+00:00March 19th, 2013|Health care reform, Pennsylvania Medicaid policy|Comments Off on Hospitals Weigh Potential Impact of Medicaid Expansion in PA
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