The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 Benefit Provisions and EPSDT

This summary is excerpted from NHeLP?s full analysis of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005. 
Pre-DRA law 
The Medicaid Act has required states to cover certain services and allowed states the option to cover others. Examples of mandatory Medicaid services for categorically needy recipients are: inpatient hospital services, physician services, nursing facility services, rural health clinic and federal qualified health center services, and Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) services for children and youth under age 21. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396a(a)(10), 1396d(a). Optional Medicaid services for adults include prescription drugs, dental services, private duty nursing services, personal care services, and physical therapy. Id. States can offer a smaller set of services to individuals eligible through a medically needy program, but must include prenatal care and delivery, ambulatory services for children under age 18 and individuals entitled to institutional services, and home health services for those entitled to nursing facility care. See Id. § 1396a(a)(10)(C).
EPSDT requires states to cover periodic and as-needed medical, vision, hearing and dental screening. EPSDT also requires states to cover any Medicaid service, whether mandatory or optional (see § 1396d(a) listing), if the service is needed to ?correct or meliorate? a child?s physical or mental condition. See Id. §§ 1396a(a)(10)(A), 1396a(a)(43), 1396d(a)(4)(B), 1396d(r).
Benefit Packages under the DRA 
The DRA gives states the option to provide Medicaid to state-specified groups through enrollment in pre-existing health insurance plans. DRA, § 6044. In so doing, the state can ignore Medicaid?s traditional rules requiring coverage of mandatory and optional services, statewideness, freedom of choice, and comparability. The provision is effective March 31, 2006. According to CMS, state plan amendments submitted by June 30, 2006, may be approved retroactive to the first day of the quarter (April 1, 2006). See CMS, Dear State Medicaid Director (Mar. 31, 2006) (SMDL #06-008) (on file with NHeLP).
States are prohibited from requiring individuals to obtain benefits through this option if they are eligible for Medicaid because they are:
  • pregnant women with incomes at or below 133 percent of the FPL,
  • individuals who qualify under the state plan because they are blind or disabled without regard to whether the individual is eligible for SSI,
  • dually eligible Medicare/Medicaid beneficiaries,
  • terminally ill hospice patients,
  • individuals eligible on the basis of institutionalization and receiving only a personal needs allowance,
  • medically frail and special medical needs individuals, to be defined by the Secretary of HHS in regulations. In a March 31st letter, the Secretary designated these individuals as those groups defined in the managed care regulation, 42 C.F.R. §§ 438.50(d)(1) (dual eligibles) and (d)(3) (children under age 19 who are eligible for SSI, TEFRA children, or receiving care through a family-centered, community care system under title V), id.,
  • beneficiaries qualifying for long term care services,
  • children in foster care and receiving foster or adoption assistance, TANF and section 1931 parents,1
  • women receiving treatment for breast and cervical cancer,
  • individuals who qualify due to TB-infection,
  • non-qualified aliens receiving care for an emergency medical condition,
  • medically needy.
See DRA, § 6044(a); CMS, Dear State Medicaid Director (Mar. 31, 2006) (SMDL #06-008). In addition, states can only exercise the option for an individual eligible under an eligibility category that had been established under the state plan on or before February 8, 2006 (the date of enactment of the provision)
Thus, mandatory enrollment will affect mostly children, working parents, and pregnant women with incomes over 133 percent of the FPL. These populations must have ?access? to services provided by rural health and federally qualified health centers. It is not clear whether states will be required to maintain access to all such clinics or whether they can assure access by contracting with one or only a few clinics.
Section 6044 allows states to provide coverage to state-selected population groups through one or more ?benchmark? or ?benchmark equivalent? plans. The benchmark plans are: (1) the standard Blue Cross Blue Shield preferred provider option under the Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan, (2) the HMO plan with the largest commercial, non-Medicaid enrollment in the state; (3) any generallyavailable state employee plan (regardless of whether any state employees select the plan); and (3) any plan that the Secretary of HHS determines to be appropriate. To be considered benchmark-equivalent, the coverage must include inpatient and outpatient hospital services, physician services, laboratory and x-ray services, well baby and child care (including immunizations), and ?other appropriate preventive services? designated by the Secretary of HHS. See DRA, § 6044. Thus, it is possible for services such as prescription drugs, dental, mental health, vision and hearing services to be excluded.

 

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