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Penn experts say Medicaid work requirements raise ethical issues, call for safeguards now

Healthcare and legal experts say if work requirement policies persist many low-income individuals with chronic conditions would lose insurance.

Jeff Lagasse, Editor

When the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced policies inviting states to establish work requirements as a condition to receive Medicaid, many in the medical community opposed it. A major reason: Hospitals may find themselves dealing with many more uninsured patients with chronic conditions. 

Groups such as the American Academy of Family Physicians and the American Psychiatric Association said the policies would create considerable health risks and financial harm among vulnerable populations, and be at odds with efforts to address some of the country's biggest public health issues, like the opioid crisis.

[Also: Many physicians give thumbs up to Medicaid work requirements, Merritt Hawkins survey says]

New Hampshire recently became the fourth state to receive a Medicaid expansion work requirement waiver. If these measures continue to be approved -- as is the case in Kentucky, Indiana and Arkansas -- CMS should act to minimize the potential harms they could cause to Medicaid recipients, two Penn Medicine experts in law and ethics contend in JAMA Viewpoint. The article that lays out basic safeguards to help guide the states.

The authors, Harald Schmidt, PhD, an assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and Allison K. Hoffman, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert in healthcare law and policy at Penn's Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics.

[Also: New Hampshire becomes 4th state to receive Medicaid expansion work requirement waiver]

That's because work requirements raise ethical concerns and many people would lose insurance -- disproportionately affecting low-income individuals with chronic conditions, according to the authors, Harald Schmidt, PhD, an assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and Allison Hoffman, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert in healthcare law and policy at Penn's Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics.

In the fall of 2017, CMS invited proposals from states that encourage personal responsibility and work requirements as incentives for beneficiaries to use fewer services and to transition to private insurance. According to CMS, such programs will "promote better mental, physical, and emotional health" and "help individuals and families rise out of poverty and attain independence."

A new survey from physician search firm Merritt Hawkins shows that three out of four physicians favor Medicaid work requirements as federal policy. 

More than 70 million low-income people in the United States are on Medicaid; any new policies would only apply to those who are not pregnant, elderly, or disabled. Work requirements have attracted considerable attention, but other initiatives push to have beneficiaries confirm eligibility annually, pay premiums on time, and not use the emergency department for non-emergency care.

As for the safeguards, the authors proposed that CMS and the states should continuously evaluate the feasibility of meeting new conditions and protect people from disproportionate penalties, like eliminating benefits for first-time infractions. Some states are offering alternatives to work requirements, like community service, which might seem accommodating, but evidence suggests that it may not be sufficient for recipients who face complex and challenging situations, the authors wrote. They believe that before CMS and the states suspend or terminate benefits, they should seek to understand why recipients have failed and provide support systems to help them.

High-risk subgroups, such as people battling chronic disease, drug addiction, or mental illness, should also receive health worker support or be exempt from the requirements altogether. Physicians treating beneficiaries who don't meet the requirements and no longer maintain coverage, the authors said, should also be able to request exemptions so they can continue to provide critical care when necessary and prevent a shift in care to emergency departments.

The authors propose that CMS and the states should monitor the health of those who have lost Medicaid benefits and later present in the emergency department, as well as stipulate when harms to beneficiaries rise to a level that requires state program changes or termination.

Finally, CMS should ensure openness and transparency by making all applications and evaluations publicly available online, similar to the information listed on ClinicalTrials.gov, and be subject to formal, external peer review. This would enable key stakeholders to comment on the adequacy of study design and to monitor harms to participants, the authors wrote.

Twitter: @JELagasse
Email the writer: jeff.lagasse@himssmedia.com