Medicaid Expansion Producing State Savings and Connecting Vulnerable Groups to Care

June 15, 2016
by Jesse Cross-Call - Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Health reformfs Medicaid expansion has produced net budget savings for many states, new data show, and states such as Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and New Jersey expect continued net savings in coming years, even after they begin paying a modest part of the expansionfs cost.  In part, this is because the expansion has lessened the burden on a patchwork of largely state-funded programs that connect people who are experiencing homelessness, have substance use disorders, or have other serious needs with critical health care services.

Medicaid expansion is a good deal for states financially, as the federal government pays the entire cost of covering the new Medicaid enrollees through this year and no less than 90 percent of the cost thereafter.  In expansion states there is now less demand for targeted Medicaid programs that serve low-income people with specific health conditions (such as certain women with breast and cervical cancers) but are funded at the statefs regular, lower matching rate, and for health programs that are entirely state-funded such as mental and behavioral health programs.  Expansion states also are collecting more revenue from their existing taxes on health plans and providers, such as the managed care plans that serve Medicaid beneficiaries in many states, which have experienced a surge in enrollment due to expansion.  The combination of these factors has produced savings for many state budgets.

Medicaid expansion gives states an opportunity to provide needed care to uninsured people whose health conditions have been a barrier to employment.But Medicaid expansion is about more than the impact on state budgets.  It also gives states an opportunity to provide needed care to uninsured people whose health conditions have been a barrier to employment.  And for those leaving the criminal justice system, particularly those with mental illness or substance use disorders, access to care can reduce recidivism.  Connecting these vulnerable populations with needed care can improve health, stabilize housing, and support employment.  

State Savings Projected to Continue

The nation has experienced historically large gains in health coverage since health reformfs major coverage provisions took effect in 2014, and those gains have been the greatest in the states that have expanded Medicaid.[1]  Medicaid expansion has also produced net budget savings in a diverse group of states such as California, Colorado, Michigan, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.[2]  

Critics claim that these savings will be fleeting.  Because enrollment has been robust, they argue, expansion will place a burden on state budgets once states must pay part of the cost of covering the newly eligible, starting next year.  But four statesf projections of the longer-term budgetary impact of expansion suggest this will not necessarily be the case:

In each of these states, the projected net savings take into account the costs of expansion, such as state matching costs that begin next year, higher administrative costs, and higher enrollment among people eligible for Medicaid under pre-health reform eligibility rules (who are covered at the regular federal Medicaid matching rate).

Connecting Vulnerable Populations With Needed Care

The Medicaid expansion does more than save states money; it also enables them to help vulnerable populations get needed care and achieve better health outcomes. 

Before health reform, only one-fifth of low-income workers had coverage through their employer, and coverage in the individual insurance market was prohibitively expensive for most people, assuming they could obtain coverage at all.[7]  Medicaid coverage was not an option for many poor adults; the typical state cut off Medicaid eligibility at 61 percent of the poverty line for working parents and at 37 percent of poverty for parents who were not employed.  Moreover, except in a handful of states with federal waivers, non-elderly adults without children could not qualify for Medicaid at all, irrespective of income.  By raising eligibility for non-elderly adults up to 138 percent of the poverty line (about $16,400 for an individual and $27,800 for a family of three in 2016), health reformfs Medicaid expansion makes coverage available to a group that was largely denied coverage options available to other Americans. 

Critics warned that new enrollees would swamp emergency rooms for basic health care and, by getting this care in the costliest setting, drive up statesf overall health costs.  Yet data from the expansionfs first few years show this is not the case; newly eligible enrollees are seeing primary care doctors and obtaining a variety of preventive services.  For example, tens of thousands of new enrollees in Kentucky have received cholesterol, diabetes, and cancer screenings and preventive dental services.[8]  Similarly, a survey of low-income non-elderly adults in three states found that the share of residents with a primary care physician rose by 8 percentage points more in the expansion states (Arkansas and Kentucky) than in the non-expansion state (Texas).[9]

The Medicaid expansion holds particular promise for people with mental health and substance use disorders.  Typically, these individuals lack a consistent source of health coverage, instead receiving a patchwork of services through state and local behavioral health programs with limited capacity to meet the demand for care.  As a result, they often cannot access basic care such as screenings, assessments, behavioral health treatment, and prescription drugs, which in turn makes it more difficult to manage their conditions. 

States are using the Medicaid expansion to better target care to the following populations:

Conclusion

States that have expanded Medicaid have experienced larger gains in health coverage than non-expansion states.  Moreover, many states have experienced net budget savings due to expansion.  In addition, the Medicaid expansion is connecting low-income adults — most of whom lacked access to comprehensive health coverage before health reform — with needed care.  Many of these individuals have serious physical and behavioral health needs, and Medicaid coverage has allowed them to get care for substance use disorders, mental illness, and a range of other conditions, which can not only improve their health but also support employment and reduce recidivism for many vulnerable individuals.