Automatic enrollment and state health reform.ppt
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1、Automatic enrollment and state health reform,Stan Dorn Senior Research Associate Urban Institute 202.261.5561 sdornui.urban.org,State Coverage Initiatives Program AcademyHealth Baltimore, MD May 22, 2007,Urban Institute,2,Overview,Enrollment models Applying auto-enrollment to state coverage reforms
2、Cross-cutting issues,Preliminary topic: Why enrollment matters,Urban Institute,4,If you build it, will they come?,Urban Institute,5,Why enrollment matters,Necessary to accomplish the goal of coverage expansion Cost offsets with eligible but un-enrolled: when they get sick, they will use services, an
3、d the state will pay Different from ineligible uninsured, whose later illnesses may not become the states responsibility Standard enrollment growth creates political vulnerability for example, see next slide,Urban Institute,6,At one year, Mass. healthcare plan falls short By Sally C. Pipes | May 15,
4、 2007,“So one year in, we have a plan that, even if no more concessions to liberal advocates are made, falls 20 percent short of its stated goal.”,Part I: Basic enrollment models,Urban Institute,8,Traditional public benefits model,Governments role Provide program information “outreach” Process appli
5、cations Individual must Apply Provide individual information showing eligibility Complete the application process,Urban Institute,9,Implications of traditional model,Denies coverage to eligible people who: Do not apply Do not complete the process It takes several years for a new program to reach man
6、y of its targeted beneficiaries High ongoing administrative costs for state BUT: Familiarity means less risk, culture shock, uncertainty, mid-course adjustment after initial stumbles Permits covert caseload controls that lower cost with less risk of successful opposition Procedural barriers “prevent
7、 waste, fraud and abuse” Reduced outreach may never come to public attention,Urban Institute,10,A different model: Auto-enrollment,Mechanisms Default enrollment Data-driven enrollment Proactively facilitated enrollment Promise lessening the historic tension between safeguarding program integrity and
8、 simplifying application procedures. More eligible people get covered A smaller percentage of ineligible people get covered Operational administrative costs drop (after infrastructure development),Urban Institute,11,Basic principle: Newtons First Law of Motion,“An object at rest tends to stay at res
9、t”,Urban Institute,12,Examples of auto-enrollment,SCHIP vs. Medicare Part D Retirement savings Medicare Part B Community-based, proactive facilitation of child health enrollment Retention of health coverage in Louisiana,Urban Institute,13,Example #1: SCHIP vs. Low-Income Subsidies (LIS) for Medicare
10、 Part D,Source: Selden, et al., 2004 (MEPS data).,Effective 10/1/97,Food stamps, after 2 years: 31% take-up,Urban Institute,14,Example # 1, continued,Total enrollment: 74%,Source: CMS enrollment data. Calculations by Urban Institute.,Urban Institute,15,Data-driven enrollment Medicare Part D, LIS,Can
11、 apply to SSA Without application, automatically enrolled in drug plan, with LIS, if received Medicaid or SSI the prior year Tremendous accomplishment largely unheralded,Urban Institute,16,Example #2: retirement savings,Sources: Etheredge, 2003; EBRI, 2005; Laibson (NBER), 2005.,Urban Institute,17,E
12、xample #3: Medicare Part B,Sources: NASI, 2006; Remler and Glied, 2003.,Urban Institute,18,Example #4: Community-based facilitators of child health enrollment,Source: Flores, et al., Pediatrics, 12/05.,Urban Institute,19,Example #5: Retention in Louisiana,Source: Summer and Mann, Georgetown Universi
13、ty Health Policy Institute (prepared for Commonwealth Fund), June 2006. Note: other policy changes included telephone contact, rather than forms, to supplement data.,Part II: Applying Auto-Enrollment to State Coverage Reforms,Urban Institute,21,Potential applications vary with the type of reform,Sub
14、sidizing low-income workers at small firms Child-focused expansions Expansions that include adults Individual mandate,Urban Institute,22,Application #1 subsidizing low-income employees of small firms,Low income is the key variable to effectively targeting subsidies to uninsured employees of small bu
15、siness Cant ask employers to means-test Privacy Hassle,Urban Institute,23,Among micro-firms employees, most uninsured workers have low incomes,Source: Clemans-Cope and Garrett (Urban Institute) 2006. Unpublished estimates based on the February 2001 and 2005 Contingent Work Supplement of the Current
16、Population Survey (CPS) and the March 2001 and 2005 Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) Supplement of the CPS. .,Urban Institute,24,Among small firms employees, most uninsured workers have low incomes,Source: Clemans-Cope and Garrett. .,Urban Institute,25,How to identify subsidy-eligible workers?,Trad
17、itional approach have workers complete application forms Expedited approach #1 use wages as proxy for income Expedited approach #2 automatic enrollment, based on state-accessible income data,Urban Institute,26,Wages vs. income: target efficiency,Percentage of workers without health coverage, by wage
18、s and income: 2005,Source: Clemans-Cope and Garrett. .,Urban Institute,27,Wages vs. income: effectiveness,Distribution of uninsured workers, by wages and income: 2005,Source: Clemans-Cope and Garrett. .,Urban Institute,28,Disadvantages of wage level as key to eligibility,Difficulty accessing federal
19、 dollars through Medicaid and SCHIP Potential for embarrassment if a low-wage worker has high family income,Urban Institute,29,Auto-enrollment strategy to identify eligible workers based on income,Obtain automated access to income databases Other means-tested programs State workforce agency earnings
20、 data State income tax data The mechanism depends on the reform In a premium support program, use data to identify low-income employees who qualify for premium payments In a program that gives small firms access to health insurance exchanges or purchasing pools, use data to identify low-income emplo
21、yees who qualify for premium subsidies,Urban Institute,30,Application #2 children,Key life event strategy Master list strategy Express lane eligibility,Urban Institute,31,Key life event strategy: two parts,Identify uninsured children at key life events Enroll them into coverage,Urban Institute,32,Ke
22、y life events: identify uninsured children,Key life event defined: life event that most uninsured children experience Ideally, build on existing mechanisms well-suited to learning insurance status Examples Annual start of school school health form Health care Hospital-based birth billing, outstation
23、ed E.W.s Other pediatric care provider billing Retroactive coverage gives provider and patient financial incentives to complete enrollment State income tax forms,Urban Institute,33,Key life event strategy enrollment,Let family request enrollment (e.g., on child health form for school) Waive confiden
24、tiality Opt-out mechanism Use state-accessible income data to ascertain potential eligibility Presumptive eligibility, if eligibility seems likely. Is PE allowed for this group only? Unclear Cant be less than statewide Cant be for subgroup of children But: PE is never for all its scope is whoever th
25、e qualified entities try to reach,Urban Institute,34,Key life events enrollment, cont.,Going from PE to ongoing Medicaid/SCHIP Reduce burdens on family Use state-available data whenever possible Pre-populated forms, seeking corrections Intensive follow-up educate re using health care and transitioni
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