Medicaid is a program jointly administered by the federal and state government that provides health benefits to eligible individuals. Federal law prohibits Medicaid benefits from being provided to a person who is incarcerated, except for selected inpatient services. State law requires the suspension of Medicaid benefits for a person who is incarcerated, rather than the termination of such benefits. The person must be allowed to apply for suspended Medicaid benefits, regardless of whether the person's release date is known.
If a person is enrolled in Medicaid at the time of incarceration, the person's incarceration status may not affect his or her enrollment in Medicaid during the first 29 days of incarceration in a state or local correctional institution. A person who is not enrolled in Medicaid at the time of incarceration may enroll in Medicaid during incarceration. The Medicaid status for such a person may not be affected during the first 29 days of incarceration.
After incarceration for 30 days or more, the person's Medicaid benefits are subject to suspension.
The Health Care Authority may seek any necessary state plan amendments or waivers to implement this requirement.
(In support) Community reentry is a critical time for incarcerated persons. Allowing Medicaid suspension was a huge step, but did not resolve the issue for everyone. When a person's Medicaid is suspended, it can take a few days to reactivate it. This can cause gaps in care, including delays in service, barriers to medication access (including medications for medication-assisted treatment and anti-psychotic medications), and barriers to direct transfers to inpatient facilities. Most incarcerated persons want to change their lives, but delays in care sometimes reinitiate the criminal cycle. Most people are incarcerated for less than 30 days. Many of these people have complex health needs and most are eligible for Medicaid. Lack of access to care disproportionately impacts people who are poor, disabled, and members of Black, Indigenous, and people of color communities. This is also a reproductive justice issue. Many kids have parents who are incarcerated.
People who need care should receive care. During the pandemic, this policy could not be more urgent. This bill will allow next-day access for persons incarcerated in jail. The bill will also allow cities and counties to bill Medicaid for inpatient services, which will save local revenues. Many counties have insufficient resources for quality reentry. The savings from this bill can be redirected to service expansions and diversions. This bill will reduce recidivism. This bill will allow reentry to be coordinated from jail. This bill will promote healthy families and communities and reduce inequities.
The federal government does not have a problem with allowing people to remain enrolled in Medicaid while incarcerated. A federal waiver may not be necessary.
Jail transitions can be challenging for Medicaid managed care organizations (MCOs). By the time an MCO is aware a person is incarcerated, the person is already released. This bill will help make sure member data are not lost in the transition. The bill should be clarified to indicate that an incarcerated person stays with the MCO and does not revert to fee-for-service Medicaid.
(Opposed) None.
(In support) This bill does not go far enough. People should have access to medical and behavioral health care the day of release, not a day or week later. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) notified states in 2004 that it is not necessary to change a person's Medicaid eligibility status during incarceration, but states cannot bill Medicaid during that time. Now federal legislation allows states to bill Medicaid for some services while still incarcerated with a Medicaid Section 1115 waiver (waiver). The 2004 CMS letter clarifies that the payment exclusion under Medicaid relating to individuals residing in public institutions does not affect their eligibility. The CMS is clear that eligible Medicaid clients may be enrolled before, during, and after the time they are held involuntarily in secure custody. The costs of this bill could be taken away by simply not suspending people in the first place.
If the waiver is granted, the potential for this bill is great. It allows those in jail in pretrial status who have not been found guilty of a crime to retain their Medicaid status for the first 30 days. This is significant because 85 percent of those in pretrail are in jail for an average of 25 days. This bill allows counties to save health care costs. In terms of numbers, 50 percent have chronic health conditions, 65 percent have major health conditions, 53 percent have substance abuse issues, and 49 percent have coexisting conditions. This bill will help people leaving jails successfully reenter society and receive health care.
(Opposed) None.