For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL31602 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Order Code RL31602 Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Medicaid, SCHIP, and Other Health Provisions in H.R. 4954: The Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act of 2002, and S. 3018: The Beneficiary Access to Care and Medicare Equity Act of 2002 October 9, 2002 Jean Hearne and Elicia Herz Specialists in Social Legislation Domestic Social Policy Division Evelyne Baumrucker and Christine Devere Analysts in Social Legislation Domestic Social Policy Division Congressional Research Service ~ The Library of Congress Medicaid, SCHIP, and Other Health Provisions in H.R. 4954: The Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act of 2002 , and S. 3018: The Beneficiary Access to Care and Medicare Equity Act of 2002 Summary Medicaid is a joint federal-state entitlement program that pays for medical assistance primarily for low-income persons who are aged, blind, disabled, members of families with dependent children, and certain other pregnant women and children. Within broad federal guidelines, each state designs and administers its own program. The federal government shares in a state's Medicaid costs by means of a statutory formula designed to provide a higher federal matching rate to states with lower per capita incomes. The State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) is another joint federal-state program that allows states to extend coverage to children in families with income that is too high to qualify for Medicaid coverage. Two bills under consideration in the House and the Senate would make important changes to Medicaid and SCHIP. The Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act of 2002 (H.R. 4954), passed the House on June 28, 2002. On October 1, 2002, the Senate Committee on Finance introduced the Beneficiary Access to Care and Medicare Equity Act of 2002 (S. 3018). While the bills are very different from each other, both are largely comprised of provisions affecting the Medicare program, and both include important changes to Medicaid, SCHIP and other health programs. Among the Medicaid provisions, both bills would increase annual disproportionate share hospital (DSH) allotments to states beginning in FY2003, but use different methods to achieve those increases. S. 3018 would also temporarily increase the federal Medicaid matching rate for certain states and would provide additional funds to states for fiscal relief through the Social Services Block Grant program, a program that funds a wide variety of social services programs. With respect to SCHIP, S. 3018 would significantly change the method by which unspent federal funds are redistributed among states. Finally, with respect to both Medicaid and SCHIP, S. 3018 places on both states and the Secretary of HHS certain public notice and hearing requirements, as well as requirements regarding receipt and consideration of public comments in the waiver development, review and approval process. It also clarifies other parameters of the Secretary's waiver authority. The following side-by-side comparison provides a brief description of current law and the changes that would be made to Medicaid, SCHIP and other health programs under H.R. 4954 and S. 3018. These provisions can be found in Title IX of H.R. 4954, and Titles VII and VIII of S. 3018. The other titles of both bills are devoted to major changes to the Medicare program (not described here). In addition, Medicare provisions in Title VIII of S. 3018 are not described here. Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Payments Under Medicaid . . . 2 Redistribution Rules Under the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Waivers under Medicaid and SCHIP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Medicaid's Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) . . . . . . . . 5 List of Tables Medicaid and SCHIP Provisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Other Provisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Medicaid, SCHIP, and Other Health Provisions in H.R. 4954: The Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act of 2002 , and S. 3018: The Beneficiary Access to Care and Medicare Equity Act of 2002 Introduction Medicaid is a joint federal-state entitlement program that pays for medical assistance primarily for low-income persons who are aged, blind, disabled, members of families with dependent children, and certain other pregnant women and children. Within broad federal guidelines, each state designs and administers its own program. The federal government shares in a state's Medicaid costs by means of a statutory formula designed to provide a higher federal matching rate to states with lower per capita incomes. In FY2001, federal matching rates ranged from 50% to 76.8% of a state's expenditures for Medicaid items and services. The State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) is another joint federal-state program that allows states to extend coverage to children in families with income that is too high to qualify for Medicaid coverage. As with Medicaid, each state designs and administers its own program and the federal government shares in state's costs by matching state spending. The SCHIP matching formula is based on the Medicaid matching formula, but results in higher matching rates that ranged from 65% to 83.8% in FY 2001. Two bills under consideration in the House and the Senate would make important changes to Medicaid and SCHIP. The Medicare Modernization and Prescription Drug Act of 2002 (H.R. 4954), passed the House on June 28, 2002. On October 1, 2002, the Senate Committee on Finance introduced the Beneficiary Access to Care and Medicare Equity Act of 2002 (S. 3018). While the bills are very different from each other, both are largely comprised of provisions affecting the Medicare program, and both include important changes to Medicaid, SCHIP and other health programs. Among the Medicaid provisions, both bills would increase annual disproportionate share hospital (DSH) allotments to states beginning in FY2003, but use different methods to achieve those increases. S. 3018 would also temporarily increase the federal Medicaid matching rate for certain states and would provide additional funds to states through the Social Services Block Grant program, a program that funds a wide variety of social services programs. With respect to SCHIP, S. 3018 would significantly change the method by which unspent federal funds are redistributed among states. Finally, with respect to both Medicaid and SCHIP, S. 3018 places on both states and the Secretary of HHS certain public notice and hearing requirements, as well as requirements regarding receipt and CRS-2 consideration of public comments in the waiver development, review and approval process. It also clarifies other parameters of the Secretary's waiver authority. The following sections describe the recent legislative changes as well as the major proposed amendments in H.R. 4954 and S. 3018. Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Payments Under Medicaid. Since 1981, states have been required to recognize, in establishing their payment rates, the situation of hospitals that serve a disproportionate number of Medicaid beneficiaries and low-income patients. These payments are referred to as DSH payments or DSH adjustments. The DSH adjustment was intended to offset the costs to hospitals of treating uninsured, low-income patients, and to protect access to care for vulnerable populations. Under broad federal guidelines, each state determines which hospitals receive DSH payments and the payment amounts to each. States that contract with health maintenance organizations (HMOs) or other prepaid managed care providers may include DSH expenses in the payment rates to contractors. DSH payments became a significant part of the program after 1989 when they grew from just under $1 billion to almost $17 billion by 1992. During that time, states' Medicaid budgets were facing a number of upward pressures while states were learning about financing techniques that made it easier to collect increased DSH payments from the federal government. In 1991, Congress intervened to control the growth of these expenditures by limiting DSH payments by state and setting national limits. The new law was successful. After 1992, DSH payments increases slowed considerably although the level of national DSH payments remained high at just under $19 billion in 1995. Significant reductions in DSH payments were included in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. BBA-97 lowered DSH payments by establishing "allotments" or ceilings on DSH payments for each state. The allotments were specified for fiscal years beginning in 1998 through 2002. For most states, those amounts declined over the 5-year period. Thereafter, the DSH allotment for a state was to equal its allotment for the preceding fiscal year increased by the percentage change in the consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U) as estimated by the Secretary for the previous fiscal year, subject to a ceiling of 12% of the total amount of expenditures for Medicaid benefits during the fiscal year. Subsequently, the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP Balanced Budget Refinements Act of 1999 (BBRA-99, P.L. 106-113) included provisions increasing the Medicaid DSH allotments for certain states and the District of Columbia. Then under Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA-2000, P.L. 106-554), new rules governing federal DSH payments for FY2001 and FY2002 were established. The "special rule" directed that DSH allotments for the two years be based on FY2000 allotments increased by inflation - instead of on the declining amounts specified in BBA-97. Allotments for FY2003 and thereafter were to revert to amounts calculated based on the methodology specified in BBA-97. BIPA-2000 also extended a special hospital-specific DSH limit that had previously applied only to certain public hospitals in California to such hospitals in all states for a 2-year period. Finally, additional funds were provided for CRS-3 certain state public hospitals not receiving DSH payments that have a low-income utilization rate in excess of 65%. Legislation. During economic downturns states' Medicaid eligibility rolls often expand at the same time as tax receipts, which help to fund those programs, contract. Recognizing this increased fiscal pressure that states are under since the economic slowing began over one year ago, both bills include provisions to increase annual state DSH allotments for fiscal years beginning in 2003. Each bill, however, uses different methods to achieve those increases. H.R. 4954 would raise DSH allotments for FY2003 by setting those amounts equal to FY2001 allotments (as specified in BBA-97), increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY 2001. Allotments for FY2004 and thereafter would be equal to the allotment for the previous year, increased by 1.7% unless the Secretary determines that the allotment under this provision would equal (or no longer exceed) the allotment for that state that would have been in effect under prior law. For these states, beginning in the first fiscal year that their allotment would equal or no longer exceed the prior law levels, their allotment would be equal to the allotment for the previous year increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for the previous year. S. 3018 would raise DSH allotments by specifying that 2003 allotments would be calculated to be equal to FY2002 allotments under BIPA-2000 increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2002; for 2004 they would be equal to FY2003 allotments increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2003; and for 2005, they would be equal to FY2004 allotments increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2004. For FY2006, allotments would be based on the amounts specified in BBA-97 for FY2002 increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for fiscal years 2002 through 2005. For FY2007 and thereafter, allotments would be calculated based on the previous years' amount increased by percentage change in the CPI-U for the previous fiscal year. In addition, for FY2003 through FY2005, S. 3018 would increase allotments for the District of Columbia and for certain extremely low DSH states. The bill specifies special formulas for these purposes. Redistribution Rules Under the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). SCHIP, created under BBA-97, is the largest publicly funded effort to provide health insurance to children since Medicaid was enacted in 1965. The program offers federal matching funds for states and territories to provide health insurance coverage to uninsured, low-income children in families whose annual incomes are higher than states' Medicaid eligibility thresholds. The original enactment appropriated federal matching grants totaling $39.7 billion for SCHIP for FY1998 through FY2007. Allotment of funds among the states is determined by a formula set in law. Each annual allotment is available to states for a period of 3 years. Under current law, allotments not spent at the end of the applicable 3-year period will be redistributed by a method to be determined by the Secretary of HHS to states that have fully exhausted their original allotments for that year. Redistributed funds not spent by the end of the fiscal year in which they are reallocated will expire. CRS-4 BIPA-2000 created a special rule for the redistribution and availability of unused FY1998 and FY1999 SCHIP allotments. The change decreased the amount available for redistribution to states that had exhausted their original allotments for those years by allowing states that had not spent their full allotments to retain a portion of their unspent funds. Specifically, out of the total pool of unspent funds for a given year, states that exhausted their allotments were given amounts equal to their excess expenditures. Then states which had not exhausted their allotments received an amount equal to their proportional contribution to the pool of unspent funds. S. 3018 builds upon BIPA-2000 by establishing a method for redistributing unspent allotments for FY2000 forward. For each of FY2000 through FY2003, states that exhaust their original allotments would receive amounts equal to their excess expenditures, subject to specific annual caps (60% - FY2000 and FY2001; 70% - FY2002; 80% - FY2003) on unspent funds. The distribution method for such funds among these states, should the pool of available funds be insufficient to cover all excess expenditures, is left to the Secretary to determine. For FY2004 forward, redistribution among such states would be the same as provided under BIPA-2000. For each of FY2000 through FY2003, the remaining unspent funds would be distributed among states that do not use their full allotments, subject to specific annual floors (40% - FY2000 and FY2001; 30% - FY2002; 20% - FY2003) on unspent funds. Each such state would receive an amount equal to the ratio of its contribution to the total pool of unspent funds to the remaining available funds. Again, for FY2004 forward, redistribution among such states would be the same as provided under BIPA-2000. For FY2004 forward, S. 3018 also would establish a caseload stabilization pool to provide certain states with additional SCHIP funding. Any remaining unspent redistributed dollars beginning with the FY1998 appropriation would become part of this pool. In addition, the bill specifies that unspent funds in the pool would remain in the pool (i.e., they do not expire). Eligible states include those whose total cumulative spending through the end of the previous fiscal year exceeds their cumulative original allotments for the same time period. These states would receive an amount equal to the ratio of such state's original allotment (for the previous fiscal year) to the total original allotments of all eligible states (for the same prior fiscal year). Waivers under Medicaid and SCHIP. Section 1115 of the Social Security Act provides the Secretary of HHS with broad authority to conduct research and demonstration projects under Medicaid (and five other programs). Under this authority, the Secretary may waive provisions in Section 1902 of Medicaid statute (usually freedom of provider choice, comparability of benefits, and statewideness).1 Most large-scale statewide waivers are approved for a 5-year period. The costs of such waivers are allowable expenditures under the applicable program. SCHIP is not identified in Section 1115. However, the SCHIP statute states that Section 1115, pertaining to research and demonstration projects, applies to SCHIP but does not specify which sections may be waived. 1 Other sections in Medicaid statute allow waiver of other provisions under certain circumstances. CRS-5 Congress has twice changed Section 1115 authority as it applies to the Medicaid waiver review and approval process. First, BBA-97 provided a process for a 3-year extension of Medicaid statewide comprehensive Section 1115 waiver projects beyond the initial 5-year term. Second, BIPA-2000 defined a process for approving extensions beyond initial 3-year extensions. Much of the detail surrounding the policies and procedures for reviewing and approving Section 1115 waiver proposals has been issued by the Secretary of HHS through written guidance. For example, in 1994, the Secretary published a notice in the Federal Register outlining requirements with respect to public notification and involvement during the development phase of proposed waiver projects under Medicaid. (SCHIP did not yet exist at that time.) Since that time, the Secretary has provided other waiver guidance. In a July 25, 2001 letter to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, HHS described its public notification requirements for the 3-year waiver extensions provided by BBA-97. In other letters to state Medicaid directors and to state health officials, the Secretary has described policy with respect to overall budget neutrality requirements, coverage of childless adults under SCHIP, as well as further details on public notice and involvement requirements. Most recently, under the current Bush Administration, a new Health Insurance Flexibility and Accountability (HIFA)1115 Waiver Initiative for Medicaid and SCHIP was established and guidance and technical information for this initiative was made available to states through postings to the agency's website. The initiative encourages states to develop statewide projects that coordinate Medicaid and SCHIP with private health insurance coverage and target uninsured individuals with income below 200% of the federal poverty level. S. 3018 responds to recent concerns that some approved waivers exceed the statutory authority of the Secretary and that explicit statutory procedures would improve the waiver approval process. The bill places on both states and the Secretary of HHS certain public notice and hearing requirements, and requirements regarding receipt and consideration of public comments in the waiver development, review and approval process. It would clarify that: (1) the waiver of a specific section under a given title must promote the objectives of that title, (2) the requirements under Medicaid's early and periodic screening, diagnostic and treatment program for children may not be waived, and (3) the Secretary may not approve waivers that would use SCHIP funds to cover childless adults (excluding caretaker relatives). Medicaid's Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP). The federal share of the cost of Medicaid items and services (excluding administrative expenses) is established by a formula set in statute. Determined annually, the FMAP is designed so that the federal government pays a larger portion of Medicaid costs in states with lower per capita income relative to the national average (and vice versa for states with higher per capita income). FMAP must not fall below 50% and may not exceed 83%. FMAP for the territories is statutorily set at 50%. In the territories, Medicaid is also subject to spending caps. Thus, the federal government pays 50% of the cost of Medicaid items and services up to those spending caps. While the underlying FMAP formula for all states has not been changed, Congress has modified FMAP in certain situations. In BBA-97, the FMAP for the District of Columbia was permanently raised to 70%. It also increased Alaska's CRS-6 FMAP to 59.8% for FY1998 through FY2000. Under BIPA-2000, the formula for calculating the state percentage and thus the federal share for Alaska for FY2001 through FY2005 was changed. The state percentage for Alaska is calculated using an adjusted per capita income calculation instead of the statewide average per capita income generally used. The adjusted per capita income for Alaska is calculated as the 3-year average per capita income for the state divided by 1.05. As with the DSH provisions, the Senate bill responds to states' concerns that recent fiscal pressure may result in Medicaid cuts. To ease states' burden, S. 3018 would temporarily increase FMAPs for FY2003. Spending caps for the territories would be increased. Only states and territories that maintain Medicaid eligibility levels as of January 1, 2002 (or reinstate eligibility levels as of that date) would be eligible for the FMAP increase. This bill would also appropriate $1 billion in additional temporary grants under the Social Services Block Grant (Title XX of the Social Security Act). The grant allotments for each state and territory are specified, and these funds may be used for services directed at the goals set forth in Title XX. The following side-by-side comparison provides a brief description of current law and the changes made to Medicaid, SCHIP and other health programs under H.R. 4954 and S. 3018. These provisions can be found in Title IX of H.R. 4954, and Titles VII and VIII of S. 3018. The other titles of both bills are devoted to major changes to the Medicare program (not described here). In addition, Medicare provisions in Title VIII of S. 3018 are not described here. CRS has published three reports on the non-Medicare provisions of BBA-97, BBRA-99, and BIPA-2000. These are: CRS Report 98-132 EPW, Medicaid: 105th Congress, CRS Report RL30400, Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP): Provisions in the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2000, and CRS Report RL30718, Medicaid, SCHIP and Other Health Provisions in H.R. 5661: Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000. CRS-7 Medicaid and SCHIP Provisions Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 National Bipartisan Commission on the No provision. Section 901. The provisions would No provision. Future of Medicaid establish a 17-member, National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicaid to analyze and recommend changes regarding the financial condition of the Medicaid program. An authorization of $1.5 mi l l i o n wo u l d sup p o r t the Commission. Disproportionate share hospital (DSH) The federal share of Medicaid Section 902. DSH allotments for Section 701. Would extend BIPA- payments disproportionate share hospital (DSH) FY2003 would be increased by setting 2000's special rule for three additional payments is capped at specified those amounts equal to FY2001 years, raising DSH allotments, subject amounts for each state for FY1998 allotments (as specified in BBA-97), to the current law limit of 12% of through FY2002. A state's allotment increased by the percentage change in medical assistance spending, for fiscal for years after 2002 will be equal to its the CPI-U for FY2001. Allotments years 2003, 2004, and 2005. specified allotment for the previous for FY2004 and thereafter would be Allotments for 2003 would be year increased by the percentage equal to the allotment for the previous calculated to be equal to FY2002 change in the CPI-U for the previous year, increased by 1.7% unless the allotments under BIPA-2000 increased year subject to a limit of no more than Secretary determines that the by the percentage change in the CPI-U 12% of spending for medical assistance allotment under this provision would for FY2002; for 2004 would be equal for that year. BIPA-2000 (P.L. 106- equal (or no longer exceed) the to FY2003 allotments increased by the 554) raised allotments for FY2001 and allotment for that state that would percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2002, but allotments for FY2003 have been in effect under prior law. FY2003; for 2005 would be equal to and thereafter revert to the amounts For these states, beginning in the first FY2004 allotments increased by the calculated as specified above. fiscal year that their allotment would percentage change in the CPI-U for equal or no longer exceed the prior FY2004. For FY2006, allotments law levels, their allotment would be would be based on the amounts equal to the allotment for the previous specified in BBA-97 for FY2002 year increased by the percentage increased by the percentage change in change in the CPI-U for the previous the CPI-U for fiscal years 2002 through year. 2005. For FY2007 and thereafter, allotments would be calculated based on the previous years' amount increased by the percentage change in the CPI-U for the previous fiscal year. Disproportionate share payments for BBA-97 specified DSH allotments for No provision. Section 701. Subject to the current law the District of Columbia the District of Columbia are $23 limit of 12% of spending for medical million for each of fiscal years 1998 assistance, DSH allotments for FY2003 through 2002. BBRA-99 increased for the District of Columbia would be CRS-8 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 DSH allotments for the District of calculated by increasing $49 million by Columbia to $32 million for each of the percentage change in the CPI-U for fiscal years 2000 through 2002. DSH fiscal years 2000, 2001 and 2002. For allotments for each year after 2002 will FY2004, the allotment would be equal be equal to its specified allotment for to the FY2003 allotment as calculated the previous year increased by the above, increased by the percentage percentage change in the CPI-U for the change in the CPI-U for FY2003. For previous year subject to a limit of no FY2005, the allotment would be equal more than 12% of spending for medical to the FY2004 allotment increased by assistance for that year. the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2004. For FY2006 and thereafter, the allotment would calculated in the manner specified for all other states. Increase in floor for extremely low For extremely low DSH states, i.e., No provision. Section 702. Would create a DSH states states whose FY1999 federal and state temporary increase in the allotments for DSH expenditures (as reported to CMS certain extremely low DSH states for on August 31, 2000) are greater than FY2003 through FY2005. For states zero but less than 1% of the state's total with DSH expenditures for FY2001 (as medical assistance expenditures during reported to CMS as of August 31, that fiscal year, the DSH allotments for 2002) that are greater than zero but less FY2001 would be equal to 1% of the than 3% of the state's total medical state's total amount of expenditures assistance expenditures during that under their plan for such assistance fiscal year, the bill would raise the during that fiscal year. For subsequent DSH allotments for FY2003 to 3% of fiscal years, the allotments for the state's total amount of expenditures extremely low DSH states would be for such assistance during that fiscal equal to their allotment for the previous year. For FY2004, allotments would be year, increased by the percentage calculated by increasing FY2003 change in the CPI-U for the previous amounts by the percentage change in year, subject to a ceiling of 12% of that the CPI-U for FY2003; and for state's total medical assistance FY2005, by increasing FY2004 payments in that year. amounts by the percentage change in the CPI-U for FY2004. Medicaid Pharmacy Assistance No provision. Section 903. States with approved No provision. Program Medicaid state plan amendments could receive grants to assist pharmacies in implementing the new prescription drug benefit proposed under Part D of Title XVIII. For each of fiscal years 2004 through 2007, the provision would authorize $150 CRS-9 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 million to be allotted among the states for such programs. The Secretary would be required to develop a method for the allocation of those funds among states, taking into account the distribution among states of priority pharmacies; small pharmacies and those serving in rural or underserved areas. 5-Year extension of the Medicare Federal law specifies several Medicare No provision. Section 703. Extends the QI-1 qualified individual (QI-1) program subgroups that are entitled to limited program until December 2007. Each under Medicaid Medicaid protection. One group of state's allocation is equal to the ratio of qualified individuals (QI-1s) includes twice all its QI-1 individuals to the sum Medicare beneficiaries entitled to Part of these counts across all states. New A coverage with income between 120- annual federal allocations for FY2003 135% of the federal poverty level or through FY2007 would be set at $400 FPL, (and who also meet certain million for each year. resource standards) who are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid. For this group, Medicaid pays the monthly Part B premium. Expenditures for the QI-1 program are paid 100% by the federal government up to the state's allocation based on a distributional formula set in law. Total federal allocations are $200 million for FY1998, $250 million in FY1999, $300 million in FY2000, $350 million in FY2001, and $400 million in FY2002. The QI-1 temporary grant program ends as of December 31, 2002. CRS-10 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 Inpatient drug prices and certain Medicaid drug rebates are calculated No provision. Section 704. The provision would public hospitals based on the difference between the modify the definition of "best price" Average Manufacturer's Price and the for the purpose of calculating Medicaid manufacturer's "best price". In drug rebates, to also exclude the determining the "best price" for a drug discounted inpatient drug prices sold by a manufacturer, certain charged to certain Medicare discounted prices and fee schedules are disproportionate share hospitals. excluded. The special discounted prices for outpatient drugs negotiated by the Office of Pharmacy Affairs (of HHS) with drug manufacturers on behalf of certain clinics and safety net providers are one example of prices excluded from Medicaid's best price determination. Because of this exclusion from Medicaid's best price definition, the discounts available to safety net providers have no bearing on the calculation of drug rebates under the Medicaid program allowing those providers to negotiate better rates with manufacturers ­ since Medicaid rebates will not change with the size of their negotiated discounts. Discounted prices for inpatient drugs for many safety net providers, however, are included in the Medicaid best price. CRS-11 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 SCHIP allotments: Changes to Rules Funds for the SCHIP Program are No provision. Section 705(a). Establishes a method for Redistribution and Extended authorized and appropriated for for redistributing unspent allotments Availability of Fiscal Year 2000 and FY1998 through FY2007. From each for FY2000 forward. For jurisdictions Subsequent Fiscal Year Allotments year's appropriation, a state is allotted that exhausted their original allotment, an amount as determined by a formula for each of FY2000 through FY2003, set in law. Funds not drawn from a each would receive an amount equal to state's allotment by the end of each their spending in excess of their fiscal year continue to be available to original exhausted allotment, subject to that state for 2 additional fiscal years. caps on available unspent funds. Funds For FY2000 forward, allotments not available for redistribution to these used at the end of 3 years will be jurisdictions would be capped at redistributed by the Secretary of Heath specified percentages­ 60% of unspent and Human Services (HHS) to states allotments for FY2000 and FY2001, that have fully spent their original 70% for FY2002, and 80% for allotments for that year. FY2003. Territories would receive an amount equal to 1.05% of the total BIPA-2000 created a special rule amount available for redistribution for the redistribution and availability of multiplied by each territory's unused FY1998 and FY1999 SCHIP proportion of the original allotment allotments. This special rule decreased available for all territories. For the amount available for redistribution FY2004 and subsequent fiscal years, to states that had used all of their the redistribution for those states and original allotments for these two years territories would be the same as under and allowed states that had not spent all BIPA-2000. of their allotments to retain some of their unspent funds. For states that did not use all their original SCHIP allotments, for each of FY2000 through FY2003, total amounts available for retention (after the reduction of amounts for states and territories as described above) would be subject to a floor­ 40% for FY2000 and FY2001, 30% for FY2002, and 20% for FY2003. Of that amount, each state would receive a ratio of its contribution to the total pool of unspent funds to the remaining available funds. For FY2004 and subsequent fiscal years, amounts available for retention by such states, is the same as under BIPA-2000. CRS-12 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 SCHIP allotments: Length of the The original enactment of SCHIP No provision. Section 705(a). Extends availability availability of reallocated funds specifies that redistributed funds not of the FY1998 and FY1999 used by the end of the fiscal year in redistributed funds through the end of which they are reallocated officially FY2003. For FY2000 and beyond, expire. reallocated funds would be available for 1 fiscal year. Redistributed and retained funds from FY1998 and FY1999 are available through the end of FY2002. SCHIP allotments: Establishment of a No provision. No provision. Section 705(b). For FY2004 and caseload stabilization pool subsequent fiscal years, establishes a caseload stabilization pool to provide certain states with additional SCHIP funding. Any remaining unused redistributed dollars beginning with the FY1998 appropriation not spent by the applicable deadlines would become a part of this pool. In addition, unspent money in the pool would remain in the pool. For a given fiscal year, states eligible for these funds are those whose total cumulative spending through the end of the previous fiscal year exceeded their cumulative original allotments for the same time period. For this purpose cumulative spending means all SCHIP expenditures since the beginning of the program. These states would receive an amount from the caseload stabilization pool equal to the ratio of such state's original allotment (for the previous fiscal year) to the total original allotments of all eligible states (for the same prior fiscal year), multiplied by the total dollars available in this pool. CRS-13 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 SCHIP allotments: Authority for No provision. No provision. Section 705(c). For FY2003 and qualifying states to use a portion of beyond, allows "qualifying states" to SCHIP funds for Medicaid use up to 20% of their original SCHIP expenditures allotment (for that fiscal year) for certain Medicaid medical assistance payments. Qualifying states would be eligible to use, from their SCHIP allotment, an amount equal to the difference between spending at the enhanced SCHIP matching rate and the FMAP for children up to age 19 with family incomes greater than 150% of the FPL. For a given fiscal year, "qualifying states" would include those who: (1) as of March 31, 1997, had a Medicaid income eligibility standard for at least one category of children (excluding infants) of at least 185% FPL; (2) as of January 1, 2001, had a SCHIP eligibility standard of at least 200% FPL; (3) did not impose waiting lists or enrollment caps for children whose family income is at least 200% FPL; (4) provide statewide SCHIP coverage to all children who meet such state's eligibility requirements; and (5) have implemented at least four additional specified procedures for establishing children's eligibility for their Medicaid and SCHIP programs. CRS-14 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 SCHIP allotments: GAO study and No provision. No provision. Section 705(d). Requires the General report regarding expenditure of SCHIP Accounting Office (GAO) to conduct a allotments study on the expenditure of state SCHIP allotments and to submit to Congress an interim report no later than October 1, 2004 with the final report due no later than October 1, 2005. The study would examine why certain states did not use all their SCHIP allotments (for each of fiscal years 1998, 1999, and 2000) by the applicable 3-year deadline. GAO would be required to evaluate the methods applied to reallocate unused original allotments, the caseload stabilization pool, the adequacy of SCHIP funding and resources, and potential benefits and problems associated with the new redistribution method established by the caseload stabilization pool. In addition, the report would include recommendations for changes in legislative action regarding expenditure of SCHIP allotments and methods for reallocation of unused original allotments. CRS-15 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 Improvement of the process for the Section 1115 of the Social Security Act No provision. Section 706. Places on both states and development and implementation of provides the Secretary of HHS with the Secretary certain public notice and Medicaid and SCHIP Waivers broad authority to conduct research and hearing requirements, and requirements demonstration projects under six regarding receipt and consideration of programs, including Medicaid and public comments in the waiver SCHIP. The Secretary may waive development, review and approval provisions in Section 1902 of Medicaid process. The Secretary must determine statute (usually freedom of provider that a waiver proposal is based on a choice, comparability of benefits, and sound hypothesis and an appropriate statewideness). The costs of such method for evaluation. Any waivers are allowable expenditures requirement under Medicaid or SCHIP, under the applicable program. For or any related regulation that is not SCHIP, no specific sections or explicitly waived and publicly requirements are cited as "waive-able." identified by the Secretary when a SCHIP statute simply states that proposal is approved would not be Section 1115, pertaining to research waived; similarly, waiver costs not and demonstration projects, applies to explicitly identified as allowable must SCHIP. BBA-97 provided a not be paid under Medicaid or SCHIP. mechanism for a 3-year extension of Clarifies that: (1) the waiver of a Medicaid statewide comprehensive specific section under a given title must 1115 waiver projects. Under BIPA- promote the objectives of that title, (2) 2000, a process was defined for the Secretary may not waive receiving extensions of Medicaid 1115 requirements under Medicaid's early waivers for those projects receiving the and periodic screening, diagnostic and initial 3-year extension. treatment program, and (3) the Secretary may not approve any Regulations describe HHS procedures proposal that would use SCHIP funds for review and approval of Section for health benefits for childless adults 1115 waivers and requirements for (excluding caretaker relatives). states with respect to public notification Effective as of the date of enactment of and invo lvement during the this Act, and applies to new proposals development phase of proposed waiver and amendments to approved projects, projects. Those requirements were that are approved or extended on or elaborated and amended in a letter to after the date of enactment. state Medicaid directors issued May 3, 2002. Temporary State Fiscal Relief The federal share of the cost of No provision. Section 707. FMAPs for the states and Medicaid items and services is equal to territories would be temporarily the federal medical assistance increased for FY2003. First, states and percentage (FMAP) multiplied by those territories whose FY2003 FMAP is CRS-16 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 costs. Determined annually, the FMAP lower than their FY2002 FMAP would is designed so that the federal retain the FY2002 FMAP (the higher government pays a larger portion of rate) for FY2003. Then, the FMAP for Medicaid costs in states with lower per each state and territory would be capita income relative to the national increased by 1.3 percentage points for average (and vice versa for states with FY2003. The spending caps for the higher per capita incomes). FMAPs for territories would also be increased by the states must not fall below 50% and 2.6%. The increases in the FMAP may not exceed 83%. FMAPs for the would not apply to disproportionate territories are statutorily set at 50%. In share hospital payments or for the territories, Medicaid programs are payments for programs under Title IV also subject to spending caps and or Title XXI (SCHIP) of the Social therefore the federal government pays Security Act. Only states and 50% of the cost of Medicaid items and territories that maintain Medicaid services up to the spending caps. eligibility levels as of January 1, 2002 (or reinstate eligibility levels as of Authorized under Title XX of the January 1, 2002) are eligible for the Social Security Act, the Social Services FMAP increase. Block Grant (SSBG) is a flexible source of funds that states may use to Appropriates $1 billion in additional support a wide variety of social temporary grants under SSBG. The services activities. Payments to states grant allotments for each state and from SSBG funds for any fiscal year territory are specified and these funds must be expended by the state in such may be used for services directed at the fiscal year or in the succeeding fiscal goals set forth in the SSBG program. year. The FY2003 Labor-HHS These additional SSBG funds would be appropriation bill (H.R. 5320; available for obligation through June introduced but not yet reported) 30, 2003 and for expenditure through includes $1.7 billion for the SSBG in September 30, 2003. FY2003. CRS-17 Other Provisions Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 Increase in appropriations for special BBA-97 amended Title III of the No provision. Section 801. Funds each grant diabetes programs for type I diabetes Public Health Service Act to create two program at $125 million per year for and Indians diabetes grant programs; one targets FY2004 and FY2005. In addition, the diabetes research and the other due date on the final evaluation report supports diabetes prevention and for both programs would be extended treatment services for Indians. Each to January 1, 2005. program received $30 million for each of FY1998 through FY2002, transferred from SCHIP (Title XXI of the Social Security Act). Under BIPA- 2000, for each grant program, total funding was increased to $100 million per year for FY2001 through FY2003. For FY2001 and FY2002, the additional $70 million was drawn from the Treasury. For FY2003, the entire $100 million is to come from the Treasury. Also, the due date on the final evaluation report for these two grant programs was extended from January 1, 2002 to January 1, 2003. Disregard of certain payments under Federal programs such as the west No provision. Section 802. Specifies that payments the Emergency Supplemental Act 2000, coast groundfish fishery provide made to an individual with respect to in the administration of federal payments to individuals to buy out west coast groundfish fishery would programs and federally assisted their vessels (i.e., boats, fishing not be counted as income or resources programs licenses) thereby eliminating their for purposes of determining the capacity to harvest fish. The goal of eligibility or the amount or extent of these payments is to reduce the overall benefits or assistance under any federal burden on the fishing industry to program. ensure the economic stability of remaining vessels. CRS-18 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 Safety Net Organizations and Patient No provision. No provision. Section 803. Would establish a Safety Advisory Committee Net Organization and Patient Advisory Commission to review the nation's health care safety net programs by: documenting and analyzing the impact of program and federal law changes on the capacity of the safety net; monitoring and linking existing data sources to track changes; supporting the development of new data systems and studying safety net failures; monitoring and providing oversight for transitions of individuals receiving SSI, Medicaid or SCHIP who enroll with managed care entities; and identifying and disseminating best practices. Identifies composition and the methods for appointing members, as well as operating and reporting requirements. Publication guidance regarding In August, 2000, the Office of Civil Section 624. The Secretary would be Section 804. Same as H.R. 4954 discrimination by national origin Rights in the Department of Health and required to issue final written guidance except in addition to Medicare, the Human Services (HHS) issued policy by January 1, 2003 concerning the g u i d a n c e wo u l d p e r t a i n t o guidance that clarified the prohibition application of the prohibition against requirements to insure access to against national origin discrimination discrimination on the basis of national covered health services under Medicaid as it effects persons with limited origin established by the Civil Rights and SCHIP for persons with limited English proficiency. Providers were Act of 1964. The guidance would proficiency in English. instructed in methods, programs, and pertain to requirements to insure access requirements that would avoid to Medicare covered health services for discrimination and would insure that persons with limited proficiency in patients with limited English skills English. receive necessary language assistance that would permit meaningful access to health services, free of charge. Although public comments were solicited, the guidance was effective immediately. CRS-19 Provisions Current Law H.R. 4954 S. 3018 Federal reimbursement of emergency State Medicaid programs are required No provision. Section 805. Would provide an health services furnished to to cover emergency services furnished appropriation for the emergency health undocumented aliens to undocumented aliens who otherwise services grant program of $48 million meet Medicaid eligibility standards. per year for FY2003 and FY2004. Some states, especially border states, say they bear a disproportionate burden For each fiscal year, $32 million of the for this type of cost. To help defray total appropriation will be distributed the costs of emergency services to to the 17 states with the highest undocumented aliens, BBA-97 made number of undocumented aliens. For $25 million available for grants to the each year, the Secretary would 12 states with the highest number of compute allotments and calculate undocumented aliens for each of counts of undocumented aliens in the FY1998-FY2001. (No such provision same manner as defined under current was made for FY 2002.) For each law. year, the Secretary would compute allotments based on a state's share of For each fiscal year, $16 million of the undocumented aliens relative to the total appropriation will be distributed undocumented aliens in all states. to the six states with the highest Numbers of undocumented aliens number of undocumented alien would be based on estimates prepared apprehensions for such fiscal year. For by the Statistics Division of the each year, the Secretary would Immigration and Naturalization compute allotments for such states Services as of October 1992. based on a state's share of undocumented alien apprehensions relative to the undocumented alien apprehensions in all such states. Numbers of undocumented alien apprehensions would be based on the f o u r mo s t r e c e n t q u a r t e r l y apprehension rates for undocumented aliens as reported by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Grants will be available to states for payment to local governments, hospitals, or other providers for 2 fiscal years. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL31602