Millions of Americans gained Medicaid coverage during the pandemic. Starting next year, millions are likely to lose it.
A mammoth spending bill that just passed by Congress would allow states to kick some people off Medicaid starting in April. Millions would become uninsured, according to estimates from the administration and several health care nonprofits.
The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that 15 to 18 million people will lose Medicaid coverage — or about 1 in 5 people currently in the program.
“The reality is that millions of people are going to lose Medicaid coverage,” said Jennifer Tolbert, the foundation’s associate director of the program on Medicaid and the uninsured.
A public health emergency
Since the coronavirus first struck, enrollment in Medicaid — the health insurance program for low-income people — has swelled from 71 million to 90 million, according to KFF. That’s by design: When the administration first declared the public health emergency (PHE), it also barred states from kicking people off Medicaid.
In a normal year, many people enroll in Medicaid and many others leave as their income or circumstances change. States run routine checks on Medicaid members to make sure they’re still eligible for the program, and throw out anyone who isn’t. The public health emergency halted that process.
“There are lots of reasons people move on and off Medicaid, but what the PHE has done is, for the last few years, no one has moved off Medicaid,” said Tolbert.
The spending bill would allow states to start kicking people off starting April 1. The federal government will also wind down extra funds given to states for the added enrolees over the next year under the proposal.
Before states remove Medicaid members, they are required to check patients’ eligibility and notify people that they’re losing coverage. However, it’s not unusual for people who are eligible for Medicaid to nonetheless get dropped from the program because of language barriers or administrative oversight, Tolbert said.
“Maybe at their annual renewal they missed a notice to provide documentation, or they didn’t know how to provide documentation,” she said.
Advocates have also raised concerns about how states will notify enrolees if they are being kicked off the program and what their options are. The effort will be particularly challenging for some of the country’s poorest people, who may not have a stable home address or access to internet or phone services to check their status.
When will people lose coverage?
The omnibus spending bill allows states to drop people from Medicaid starting April 1, but many will likely take longer. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid has recommended that states take a full year to re-evaluate everyone in the program — although states are not required to follow that guidance.
“Moving these people off Medicaid isn’t going to happen on day one,” said Chris Meekins, an analyst with Raymond James who follows health care. “I expect red states have taken steps already to identify who they believe most likely to be ineligible, to target those people first,” he said.
Many people who lose Medicaid will be able to find other health insurance, such as through an employer, the Affordable Care Act marketplace or, in the case of kids, the Children’s Health Insurance Program. But about 5 million will remain uninsured — a potentially devastating situation.
“Those individuals don’t really have anywhere else to go to get coverage,” said Tolbert. “Because they remain eligible for Medicaid… they cannot go to the marketplace and get coverage.”
Health care advocates urge people who are on Medicaid to make sure their contact information is up to date on their accounts and that they check the mail frequently to keep an eye on their eligibility status as that April 1 date nears.
The bill also frees up additional funds to pay for more stable health insurance coverage for children in low-income households, by requiring states to keep those children on Medicaid for at least a year once they’ve enrolled.
The Associated Press contributed reporting.