Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
White House Rescinds Medicaid Waiver In Texas Over Flawed Approval Process
A federal waiver granting Texas billions of dollars over the next decade to help cover emergency care for the uninsured was abruptly rescinded Friday, a move that could upend the state鈥檚 health care safety net and adds pressure on Republican leaders hesitant to expand Medicaid. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said in a letter that it had incorrectly allowed Texas to forgo the normal comment period when applying for an extension of its 1115 waiver, which reimburses hospitals in the state for uncompensated care. (Blackman, 4/16)
The Biden administration on Friday unwound a 10-year extension of Texas' Medicaid waiver, arguing that the Trump administration should not have approved its more than $100 billion request without going through the usual notice and comment period. Texas asked CMS to fast-track an extension of its Medicaid waiver, which mostly covers uncompensated care costs, in November. At the time, the state said it needed an exemption from the usual public comment period to ensure financial stability for providers and the state's Medicaid program during the COVID-19 public health emergency. (Brady, 4/16)
The Trump administration spent four years trying to reshape Medicaid to make it fit conservative priorities.聽But now the Biden administration is trying to pull it in a different direction.聽President Trump pushed states to weed out ineligible enrollees and greenlit work requirements in exchange for benefits. But President Biden 鈥 and, if confirmed, his nominee to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Chiquita Brooks-LaSure -- are expected to push to get more people on the Medicaid rolls. (Ellerbeck and Cunningham, 4/19)
In other Medicare and Medicaid updates 鈥
The state auditor and Mississippi attorney general are investigating whether Centene Corp., as a provider of Medicaid drug services, failed to disclose discounts on pharmacy services, inflated dispensing fees and received reimbursements for amounts already paid. Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost made similar allegations in a lawsuit. 鈥淐orporate greed has led Centene and its wholly owned subsidiaries to fleece taxpayers out of millions,鈥 he said. 鈥淐entene has broken trust with the state of Ohio, and I intend to hold this company accountable for its deceptive practices.鈥 (Mitchell, 4/18)
As members of Congress decide how to expand access to telehealth after the pandemic, one of the biggest questions has centered around how much Medicare providers should be paid for virtual care. While the rates Medicare pays for telehealth and in-person services are currently the same, that arrangement鈥攁long with several other CMS telehealth waivers鈥攅xpires at the end of the public health emergency absent Congressional action. (Hellmann and Tepper, 4/16)