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Breast Health Summit: Update on Health Insurance

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Title: Breast Health Summit: Update on Health Insurance


1
Breast Health SummitUpdate on Health Insurance
Womens Health Access in Texas
  • Anne Dunkelberg, Assistant Director
  • Center for Public Policy Priorities
    (dunkelberg_at_cppp.org)
  • May 4, 2006

2
Texas Health Insurance System
  • US Census Bureau Statistics (March 2005 CPS)
  • Approximately 5.6 million Texans uninsured in
    2004
  • 25.1 of Texans of all ages were uninsured
  • 27.6 of Texans under age of 65 were uninsured
  • Another three million Texans covered by Medicaid
    or CHIP (i.e., generally not insured through
    private coverage)
  • Why are so many Texans uninsured?
  • Low percentage of employer-sponsored
    insurance (ESI)
  • 9 below national average for lt 65 (54.2, vs.
    63.2)
  • 9.3 below national average for lt18
  • Only 12.8 of Texans below poverty have ESI
  • Approximately 83 of Texas Medicaid recipients
    are below poverty (i.e. are unlikely to be
    insured w/o Medicaid)

3
Health Insurance and Women
  • Nationally, 19 of women ages 18-64 were
    uninsured in 2004, 80 of them in working
    families.
  • In Texas 29 (about 2 million) of women ages
    18-64 were uninsured.
  • 40 of Texas women 18-64 live below 200 FPL
    (40,000 pre-tax income for a family of 4).
  • 52 of those low-income women are uninsured.
  • More adult women today are covered through their
    own ESI than through their spouse, but women
    are less likely than men to get insurance through
    their own job.
  • Uninsured women are
  • 3.5 times more likely to go without care due to
    cost than insured women.
  • twice as likely to have gone without a Pap test
    in the last 2 years than insured women. (Source
    KFF)

4
Texas Uninsured by Income
5
How Does Immigration Factor In?
  • Immigrants are NOT the primary cause of Texas
    last-place ranking
  • Census reported 2.47 million non-citizens
    (includes both legal residents and undocumented
    persons) 1.43 of them uninsured (57.8 of
    non-citizens)
  • BUT! If you removed non-citizens from the
    equation, Texas would still be tied with New
    Mexico for the worst uninsured rate at 20.8
    uninsured, (even if you left the non-citizens in
    the other states counts)
  • Without immigrants, New Mexicos rate would drop
    to 19, and Californias to 14

6
Texas Medicaid Who it Helps
December 2005, HHSC data.
Total enrolled 12/1/2005 2,707,681
7
Medicaid in Texas Who it Helps
  • Medicaid
  • As of December 2005, 2.7 million Texans were
    enrolled in Medicaid
  • 1.8 million were children
  • about 89,700 of these children, or 5, were
    receiving disability-related Medicaid (98 of
    these on SSI)
  • about 12,500 were pregnant teens (0.7 of the
    kids 0.5 of all Medicaid)
  • 141,700 in TANF cash assistance families (5.2 of
    total caseload)
  • OTHER 1.6 MILLION predominantly in WORKING POOR
    FAMILIES
  • (about 1.3 million worker-headed families,
  • Other 20 are headed by disabled parents or
    living on child support from non-custodial
    parent)
  • 898,500 were adults
  • 691,000 (77 of the adults) were elderly or
    disabled. Adults on SSI account for 60 of the
    aged and disabled recipients
  • Other adults 91,500 maternity coverage 31,000
    TANF parents (1.1 of total caseload)
  • NOTE there are fewer than 95,000 poor parents on
    Texas Medicaid- see pie chart. 63,000 either TMA
    (Transitional Medicaid Assistance) or parents who
    are at or below TANF income, but not receiving
    TANF cash assistance
  • Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
  • as of September 1, 2003 507,259 children
  • as of April 1, 2006 292,681 (drop of 214,578,
    or 42)

8
Income Caps for Texas Medicaid and CHIP, 2006
21,708
33,200
30,710/yr
30,710/yr
22,078/yr
222
200
16,600
7,476
185
185
2,256
3,696
133
100
74
13.6
22.3
Income Limit as Percentage of Federal Poverty
Income Annual Income is for a family of 3,
except Individual Incomes shown for SSI and Long
Term Care
9
Why Very Few Poor Parents are Enrolled in Texas
Medicaid
  • Texas Medicaid income cap for poor parents has
    not been increased by our Legislature for 20
    years.
  • Working poor parents in Texas can get Medicaid
    now ONLY if they earn less than the
    legislatively-imposed income cap of 188 per
    month for a family of 3 (308 if one parent is
    working).
  • This fixed dollar amount cap does not increase
    from year to year with inflation. In 2006 this
    income cap denies Medicaid to parents with
    incomes above 13.6 of the federal poverty
    income.
  • Forces poor parents with high medical needs to
    choose between work and health care 15 hours of
    work per week at minimum wage (5.15 per hour)
    makes them too well off to get Medicaid.
  • Texas can increase the Medicaid income limit for
    parents to any level it chooses, without any
    special federal approval. The only limiting
    factor is our willingness to put up our states
    share (about 40) of the costs.
  • Today, fewer than 95,000 poor Texas parents get
    Medicaid, though
  • there are about 836,000 poor parents in the state
  • 61 of adult Texans 18-64 below poverty are
    uninsured
  • 1.8 million Texas children have Medicaid coverage

10
Medicaid Covers the Uninsurable
  • Medicaid covers huge numbers of medically
    uninsurable Americans - (so average cost per
    client is higher than private market)
  • Most Americans with mental retardation
  • Most Americans with serious mental illness that
    began before or in early adulthood
  • Most Americans in nursing homes ( 70 in Texas)
  • Many Americans with disabilities acquired before
    adulthood, or in early adulthood
  • Largest source of federal spending on HIV/AIDS
    (49 in 2005)
  • Medicaid provides prenatal and maternity care for
    nearly half the children born in Texas and U.S
  • However, Medicaid pays many providers well below
    private-market rates - (so cost per client is
    less than it would be in private market)
  • Texas Physician reimbursement rates not increased
    in a decade

11
Who is Left Out of Medicaid?
  • Medicaid is not available to all poor or
    low-income Texans
  • Must have limited income and assets in most cases
  • Must qualify categorically (e.g. be pregnant and
    earning 185 FPL or less)
  • VERY FEW working poor adults qualify for Texas
    Medicaid
  • Categories not covered
  • Non-disabled, childless adults
  • 25 year-old single construction worker cannot get
    coverage, even if laid off
  • Undocumented immigrants, except in an emergency
    (and must meet all income and categorical
    requirements)
  • The undocumented 25 year-old single construction
    worker construction worker cannot get covered
  • Legal immigrants, though Texas has option
  • Lawful permanent resident of U.S. who entered U.S
    in 1998 cannot get coverage, even if severely
    disabled

12
New CHIP Perinatal Coverage Planned
  • Last-minute addition to the budget bill
    authorized this (Rider 70 HHSC).
  • HHSC plans start-up 9/2006.
  • The benefit and eligibility belong to the
    perinate, not the mother.
  • Will provide prenatal care and delivery to U.S
    citizen women 186-200 FPL (not quite low enough
    to qualify for Medicaid).
  • ALSO will pick up mothers 0-200 FPL who do not
    qualify for Medicaid maternity coverage because
    they are either a legal immigrant or an
    undocumented resident.
  • This means that many of the covered perinates
    would already have been eligible for Medicaid at
    birth, i.e. all those with incomes below 185
    FPL.
  • over 39,000 will be infants who would have been
    enrolled in Medicaid at birth under current
    rules, and
  • about 8,300 are perinates whose prenatal care
    would not have been covered without this option
    (but would have qualified for CHIP after birth).

Center for Public Policy Priorities www.cppp.o
rg
13
Womens Health and Family Planning Medicaid
Waiver
  • SB 747 by Senator John Carona
  • Texas Medicaid will provide basic medical
    check-ups and birth control services to adult
    Texas women (ages 18 and older) up to 185 of the
    poverty line (thats 2,559 per month pre-tax
    income for a family of 3 in 2005).
  • Currently in Texas, working mothers must live at
    or below 23 of the FPL to qualify for Medicaid
    (22 of poverty is less than 308 per month for a
    family of 3) and childless women cant qualify at
    all so the waiver could help many thousands of
    women who cant get full Medicaid benefits.
  • Texas has the highest of uninsured women aged
    18 to 64 (29.3) in the nation (the U.S. average
    is 18.6)
  • About 40 of all Texas women live below 200 of
    poverty, and 52 of them are uninsured.
  • HHSC still negotiating details with CMS,
    tentative September 2006 start-up.

14
Background Medicaid BCCPTA
  • New Medicaid eligibility option enacted by
    Congress in 2000
  • Linked to CDC public health program (NBCCEDP)
  • Medicaid coverage for
  • Women,
  • Screened under the program (state options here)
  • In need of treatment
  • Under age 65
  • Uninsured/underinsured
  • Full Medicaid coverage until cancer treatment
    ends
  • Enhanced federal match
  • Medicaid income eligibility limits do not apply
    immigration eligibility restrictions do apply
  • States have IMPORTANT OPTIONS which affect the
    number of women who get help-- variation is
    substantial

15
The Awful Acronyms
  • Federal law that created the Medicaid coverage
    option is the Breast and Cervical Cancer
    Prevention and Treatment Act (BCCPTA) this is
    how federal Medicaid authorities (CMS) refer to
    the Medicaid coverage.
  • Just for todays presentation, I will refer to
    BCC Medicaid.
  • Eligibility for BCC Medicaid is LINKED to the
    CDCs National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early
    Detection Program (NBCCEDP) this is how FEDS
    refer to this cancer screening program.
  • In TEXAS, the NBCCEDP screening program is
    administered by the Texas Department of State
    Health Services (DSHS), and THEY refer to their
    screening program as Breast and Cervical Cancer
    Control Services (BCCCS). So you may see
    NBCCEDP and BCCCS used interchangeably in
    Texas.

16
BCC Medicaid Links 2 Programs that are Quite
Different
  • NBCCEDP public health, surveillance, outreach
  • Target population non-screened women,
    regardless of insurance status age 40-64
    (breast), 18-64 (cervical)
  • 15 of eligible population screened
  • Provides clinical breast examinations,
    mammograms, pelvic examinations, and Pap tests
    through 42 Texas contractors
  • Income eligibility limit of 200-250 FPL no cost
    to client
  • Block grant funding limited
  • BCC Medicaid coverage
  • Target population uninsured women under 65
  • Treatment oriented
  • Not income limited
  • Entitlement

17
Screened Under the Program?
  • The federal law says a woman must be screened
    under the NBCCEDP program to be eligible for the
    BCCPTA Medicaid coverage.
  • BUT states actually have LOTS of flexibility to
    DEFINE screened under the program.
  • There are 3 options for defining screened under
    the program.
  • The impact of the different choices can be quite
    significant
  • Texas chose 1, and Georgia 3,
  • as a result Texas served 1,200 women over roughly
    the same period that Georgia served 4,200
  • Even though our population at 22.3 million is
    over 2.5 times theirs at 8.7 million.

18
Screened Under the Program Defined
  • Three options
  • 1. NBCCEDP (Title XV) funds paid for all or part
    of screening service (26 states, e.g. CO, IN. MT,
    PA, TX)
  • 2. The individuals screening may not have been
    paid directly by NBCCEDP, but the provider is one
    who receives Title XV funds (13 states, e.g. IL,
    MD, NY)
  • 3. Screening rendered by any other
    provider/entity designated by the state (11
    states, e.g. CA, GA, TN)

19
Option 1 is Narrowest Consequences
  • Excludes women screened elsewhere
  • Uninsured women in Option 1 states (including
    Texas) who
  • pay out of pocket or
  • get charity care for screening, or
  • Get diagnosed in the ER
  • Become ineligible for BCC Medicaid if the
    provider listed above was not one of the 42
    NBCCEDP contractors.
  • American Cancer Society toll-free help lines have
    identified numerous Texas women in this situation.

20
Option 3
  • Georgia uses Option 3
  • recognizes any licensed provider
  • Patients screened/diagnosed by any appropriately
    licensed provider are referred to an NBCCEDP
    contractor.
  • Those meeting 200 FPL income eligibility
    standard are referred to Medicaid for BCC
    Medicaid.
  • As a result, Georgia served 4,200 women over
    roughly the same period that Texas served just
    1,200.
  • Even though our population, at 22.3 million, is
    over 2.5 times theirs (at 8.7 million).

21
Next Steps for Advocates, Providers Increase
Public Awareness!
  • The Womens health waiver, plus any increase in
    BCCC program funding, will provide many more
    women access to screening.
  • So, it will be more important than ever for ALL
    providers, advocates, and CBOs to understand how
    the current option 1 pathway to BCC Medicaid
    works in Texas TO ENSURE THAT NOT A SINGLE
    ELIGIBLE UNINSURED WOMAN IS DENIED COVERAGE!
  • This may require all of us partnering with the
    state to help educate all health care providers
    on the correct way to make sure a woman gets BCC
    Medicaid coverage.

22
CMS QA on Medicaid BCCPTA
  • http//new.cms.hhs.gov/MedicaidEligibility/
  • downloads/breastandcervical4.pdf

23
Next Steps for Advocates, Providers Opportunity
for Change
  • Texas law (Senator Jane Nelsons SB 532, which
    became law in 2001) does not require Texas to use
    Option 1.
  • Recent awareness of the problems with Option 1
    could result in the policy being changed to
    Option 3 without any action by the Legislature.
  • If not changed at the agency level, watch for
    possible legislative action in January 2007.
  • Messages of support to Governor, First Lady, and
    Senator Nelson may be helpful.

24
Opportunities RIGHT NOW!
  • Support state funding for Texas BCCC program to
    double the number of women screened.
  • Support Option 3 to allow more uninsured women
    to access treatment for breast and cervical
    cancer through Medicaid.
  • Support a Texas Tax system that will make it
    possible to find money for better womens health
    care programs!
  • Get involved with outreach
  • Letting immigrant mothers know about the new
    prenatal care program
  • Helping women get breast and cervical cancer
    screening and treatment, and Family Planning/GYN
    care

25
THINK BIG for the FUTURE
  • Support Expansion of Full Medicaid benefits for
    Working Poor Parents
  • Learn about, think about, talk about how Texas
    and the U.S. can work toward Health Security for
    everyone!

26
  • The Center for Public Policy Priorities
    encourages you to reproduce and distribute these
    slides, which were developed for use in making
    public presentations.
  • If you reproduce these slides, please give
    appropriate credit to CPPP.
  • The data presented here may become outdated. For
    the most recent information, or to sign up for
    our free
  • e-mail updates, visit www.cppp.org
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