Same groups that got judge to vacate new Medicaid plan ask federal officials to disapprove related cuts in dental, vision care-HEALTHYLIVE

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

Three advocacy groups have asked the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to reject recent changes to Kentucky's Medicaid program that took dental, vision and non-emergency medical transportation benefits from 460,000 Kentuckians.

In a letter to CMS, the National Health Law Program, a public-interest law firm; the Kentucky Equal Justice Center, and the Southern Poverty Law Center say the state failed to comply with procedural requirements, including an appropriate public-notice period or a 30-day public comment period required by federal law.

The letter also says the state's official request to remove these services, called a state plan amendment (SPA), was never approved, noting that it is not on CMS's online list of approved SPAs, so "We have concluded that CMS has not approved this SPA."

The 460,000 people are covered by the state's 2014 expansion of Medicaid, under the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, to those who earn up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Under a state Medicaid plan that was vacated by a federal judge, those covered by the expansion could "earn" dental and vision benefits by participating in certain self-improvement activities, such as passing a GED exam, completing job training, or completing wellness activities such as stop-smoking classes, weight-loss programs or diabetes education. They could also earn credits by working; most on the expansion work.

When U.S. District Judge James Boasberg of Washington, D.C., vacated the state's new overall plan for Medicaid, that left the 460,000 people without a way to earn the benefits. The three groups, which filed the lawsuit, argue in their letter to CMS that the state's denial of benefits violates Boasberg's order because "The court expressly intended to maintain the status quo." The letter urges CMS to "act quickly" to reject these changes," which they say "are causing great confusion and harm."

As an example, the letter says an employee of a Kentucky Medicaid managed-care organization said one of its members had been told they couldn't have a "medically necessary" surgery until some of her teeth were pulled, but her dental benefits had been denied because of the cutback.

Deborah Yetter of the Louisville Courier Journal has reported "widespread concern and confusion about the cuts," including patients showing up at dental clinics who should have been covered, like children and pregnant women, but were showing up in the state's system as having no coverage. The Kentucky Oral Health Coalition has also reported similar denials to eligible children and pregnant women.

Doug Hogan, a spokesman for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, told Yetter that it was the Courier Journal and the advocacy groups who were perpetuating confusion, noting that pregnant women and children are exempt from the cuts.  He also blamed health-care providers who "have misinterpreted computer-screen eligibility information and turned away some patients."

In a July 6 statement, Kristi Putnam, the cabinet's deputy secretary, repeated that contention and said the state has since "taken feedback from providers on how to better display the information and to make it easier to understand." The cabinet has also updated the webpage at kentuckyhealth.ky.gov with, among other things, a resources guide for dental and vision providers.

Yetter reported that Dr. Bill Collins, an Eastern Kentucky dentist who cares for Medicaid patients in Pike and Clay counties, "insisted that multiple patients, including children and a pregnant woman, were wrongly listed on the state's computer system as having no coverage," but the problem was fixed "It's not the dentists' fault," he told Yetter. "It's the state's fault for what they are putting on the screens."

The Kentucky Equal Justice Center has filed an open records request seeking more information on the state plan amendment that was submitted to CMS in April. Hogan said in an e-mail, “We are still reviewing the letter, but we have been in contact with CMS throughout the state plan amendment process going all the way back to April and will continue to work with them through the approval process.”

The vacated plan, called Kentucky HEALTH for "Helping to Engage and Achieve Long Term Health," was set to launch July 1. It included requirements for work, volunteering, job training or drug treatment; monthly reporting; lock-out periods for failure to comply; and small premiums based on income.

On June 29, Boasberg sent the plan back to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for review, ruling that Secretary Alex Azar had not fully considered the state's projection that in five years the Medicaid rolls would have 95,000 fewer people with the plan than without it.


from Kentucky Health News https://ift.tt/2KG4trQ

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