Reducing Medicaid Enrollment
Barriers for Individuals Who Are Homeless
APPLICATION:
- Provide written information that is comprehensible
to applicants explaining Medicaid eligibility, application, enrollment,
and beneficiary
rights. Provide language-appropriate forms and assistance for
applicants.
- Simplify the Medicaid application form and procedures.
- Encourage homeless
applicants to list third-party contacts (i.e., persons with a
stable address authorized to receive communications
on their behalf) on Medicaid applications.
ELIGIBILITY DETERMINATION:
- Consolidate Medicaid eligibility determination within one agency that is responsible for oversight of application, follow-up and
recertification.
- Assure that all eligibility workers understand current
Medicaid policy and procedures and do not have excessive caseloads.
Educate them about
how to respond sensitively to individuals with behavioral
health problems.
- Promote outreach efforts to enroll eligible applicants and
keep them enrolled. Outstation eligibility workers in more
federally
qualified
health centers serving homeless people.
ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS:
- Implement state options to expand Medicaid eligibility
to non-disabled, non-elderly adults without dependent children and to
parents of Medicaid-eligible children.
- Establish less rigid documentation
requirements; require only documentation specified in the Federal
Medicaid statute
for certification and recertification.
- Implement the state option
to eliminate assets requirements for Medicaid eligibility.
- Discontinue
personal interview requirements for eligibility determination
and redetermination; permit mail-in
Medicaid applications and
required documentation to verify eligibility.
ENROLLMENT BARRIERS:
- Form community-based working groups to identify and
address enrollment barriers for individuals who are homeless. Include
homeless beneficiaries
and their advocates, and representatives of all agencies
involved in the Medicaid application and enrollment process.
- Establish Homeless Eligibility Units to reduce enrollment
barriers for homeless applicants.
RECERTIFICATION:
- Require recertification no more than once annually or
when circumstances affecting eligibility change. Require
only
new information during
recertification. Retrieve existing information
from state databases rather than asking recipients
to provide the
same documentation
again.
- Target homeless beneficiaries for special outreach
during recertification periods. Add a data field for
housing status
to the Medicaid
application and information management system to make
this possible.
- Provide timely information on the disposition
of cases to authorized service providers (e.g., applications
approved
and
denied, cases
recertified or terminated).
- Protect Medicaid beneficiaries’ due
process rights when there is reason to suspect
that they are no longer eligible— i.e.,
the right to ex parte determination of eligibility
under any other category in the state Medicaid plan,
to timely
notification of termination
or changes in eligibility requirements, to appeal
decisions affecting eligibility, and to continued
coverage of benefits
while ex parte determinations and
appeals are pending.
Source: Casualties
of Complexity: Why Eligible Homeless People Are Not
Enrolled in Medicaid. National Health
Care for the
Homeless Council:
May 2001: www.nhchc.org/Publications/CasualtiesofComplexity.pdf.
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