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Medicaid and SCHIP: Recent HHS Approvals of Demonstration Waiver Projects Raise Concerns

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date July 12, 2002
Report No. GAO-02-817
Subject
Summary:

States provide health care coverage to about 40 million uninsured, low-income adults and children under two federal-state programs--Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). To receive federal funding, states must meet statutory requirements, including providing certain levels of benefits to specified populations. Under section 1115 of the Social Security Act, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) can waive many of the statutory requirements in the case of experimental, pilot, or demonstration projects likely to promote program objectives. Since August 2001, HHS has approved four of 13 waiver proposals from states to either expand health insurance to uninsured populations or extend pharmacy coverage to low-income seniors, consistent with the new goals. Of the nine proposals still under review, five seek to expand coverage to uninsured populations, while four would provide pharmacy benefits for low-income seniors. GAO has both legal and policy concerns about the extent to which the approved waivers are consistent with the goals and fiscal integrity of Medicaid and SCHIP. The legal concern is that HHS has allowed Arizona to use unspent SCHIP funding to cover adults without children, despite SCHIP's objective of expanding health coverage to low-income children. GAO found that HHS' approval of the waiver to cover childless adults is not consistent with this objective, and it is not authorized. A related policy concern is that HHS used its waiver authority to allow Arizona and California to use SCHIP funds to cover parents of SCHIP and Medicare-eligible children with no regard to cost effectiveness when the statute provides that family coverage may be provided only if it is cost-effective to do so--that is, with no additional costs beyond covering the child. An opportunity for the public to learn about and comment on pending waivers has not been consistently provided in accordance with policy adopted by HHS in 1994. At the federal level, since 1988 HHS has not followed established procedures to publish notification of new and pending section 1115 waiver applications in the Federal Register with a 30-day comment period.

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