Feature

Thousands mistakenly enrolled during state’s Medicaid expansion, feds find


 


In other instances, beneficiaries were already enrolled in Medicare, the federal health insurance for people 65 and older or who have severe disabilities, and did not qualify for Medi-Cal. One woman indicated she didn’t want Medi-Cal but was enrolled anyway.

In 2014, the state struggled to clear a massive backlog of Medi-Cal applications, which reached about 900,000 at one point. Many people complained about being mistakenly rejected for coverage or that their applications were lost in the state or county computer systems.

California was one of 31 states to expand Medicaid under the 2010 Affordable Care Act. The health law established a higher federal reimbursement for these newly eligible patients, primarily low-income adults without children. After expansion started in 2014, the HHS inspector general’s office began reviewing whether states were determining eligibility correctly and spending taxpayer dollars appropriately.

In a similar audit released in January, the inspector general estimated that New York spent $26.2 million in federal Medicaid money on 47,271 expansion enrollees who were ineligible for coverage. (The sample size there was 130 enrollees.) Overall, New York had far fewer expansion enrollees and related spending, compared with California.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Women in medicine shout #MeToo about sexual harassment at work
MDedge Rheumatology
MDedge Daily News: Avoid warfarin’s polypharmacy perils
MDedge Rheumatology
Podcasts
MDedge Rheumatology
‘Right to try’ bill passes House
MDedge Rheumatology
MDedge Daily News: Treating H. pylori slashed new gastric cancers
MDedge Rheumatology
Rheumatologists push back on feds’ association health plan proposal
MDedge Rheumatology
Drug pricing proposals raise red flags with specialists
MDedge Rheumatology
Study using U.K. data quantifies infection risk associated with psoriasis
MDedge Rheumatology
MDedge Daily News: Is kratom the answer to the opioid crisis?
MDedge Rheumatology
MDedge Daily News: Why most heart failure may be preventable
MDedge Rheumatology