Wisconsin's experience with Medicaid auto-enrollment: lessons for other states.

Medicare & medicaid research review Pub Date : 2012-06-04 eCollection Date: 2012-01-01 DOI:10.5600/mmrr.002.02.a02
Thomas DeLeire, Lindsey Leininger, Laura Dague, Shannon Mok, Donna Friedsam
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) relies heavily on the expansion of Medicaid eligibility to cover uninsured populations. In February 2008, Wisconsin expanded and reformed its Medicaid/CHIP program and, as part of program implementation, automatically enrolled a set of newly eligible parents and children. This process of "auto-enrollment" targeted newly eligible parents and older children whose children/siblings were already enrolled in the state's Medicaid/CHIP program. Auto-enrollment brought over 44,000 individuals into the program, representing more than 60% of all enrollees in the first month of the reformed program. Individuals who were auto-enrolled were modestly more likely to leave the program relative to other individuals who enrolled in February 2008, unless their incomes were high enough to be required to pay premiums; these auto-enrollees were much more likely to exit relative to other enrollees subject to premium payments. The higher exit rates exhibited by non-premium paying auto-enrollees were likely due to the fact that over 40% of auto-enrollees were covered by a private insurance policy in the month of their enrollment, compared to approximately 30% for regular enrollees. A national simulation of an auto-enrollment process similar to Wisconsin's, including the expansion of adult Medicaid eligibility to 133% of the federal poverty level under the ACA, suggests that 2.5 million of the 5.6 million newly eligible parents could be auto-enrolled, and approximately 25% of this population would be privately insured. These results suggest that auto-enrollment may be appropriate for other states, especially in their efforts to enroll eligible populations who are not subject to premium requirements.

威斯康辛州医疗补助自动登记的经验:给其他州的教训。
《患者保护和平价医疗法案》(Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, ACA)在很大程度上依赖于扩大医疗补助计划(Medicaid)的资格,以覆盖未参保人群。2008年2月,威斯康辛州扩大并改革了其医疗补助/CHIP计划,作为计划实施的一部分,自动登记了一组新的符合条件的父母和孩子。这个“自动注册”的过程针对的是新获得资格的父母和孩子/兄弟姐妹已经参加了该州医疗补助/CHIP计划的年龄较大的孩子。自动登记使44,000多人加入了该计划,占改革后第一个月所有登记人数的60%以上。与2008年2月加入保险的人相比,自动加入保险的人退出保险计划的可能性略高,除非他们的收入高到足以支付保费;相对于其他需要支付保费的参保人,这些自动参保人更有可能退出医保。非付费汽车参保人的退出率较高,可能是因为超过40%的汽车参保人在登记当月都有私人保险,而普通参保人的这一比例约为30%。一项与威斯康辛州类似的自动注册过程的全国模拟,包括将成人医疗补助资格扩大到《平价医疗法案》规定的联邦贫困水平的133%,表明560万新合格父母中有250万人可以自动注册,其中约25%的人将拥有私人保险。这些结果表明,自动登记可能适用于其他州,特别是在他们努力招收不受保费要求约束的合格人群时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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