Medicaid, a joint federal and state health program for the poor,
allows states to seek waivers from the federal government to create
work requirements. As of February 2019, six states have received
approval for work requirement waivers, eight state programs are
awaiting approval, and one state waiver is facing legal challenges
in court, researchers note in Health Affairs.
Proponents of Medicaid work requirements maintain that benefits are
only meant to be temporary and that employment will help people move
out of poverty. Opponents argue that cutting off benefits for people
too sick to work prevents them from getting healthy enough to hold
down jobs.
"It's well known that Medicaid enrollees overall have higher burden
of physical and mental health problems than the general population,"
said study co-author Brendan Saloner of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health in Baltimore.
"What our study adds is new information showing that among the
Medicaid population that is likely to be subject to work
requirements, there is likely to be greater burden on those with
physical and behavioral health conditions," Saloner said by email.
"It underscores that any attempt to implement work requirements will
need to confront the reality that many of the people who are likely
to risk losing their coverage have significant health needs that
likely prevent them from working," Saloner added.
For the study, researchers examined data from the National Survey on
Drug Use and Health for the period 2014 to 2016.
Compared to Medicaid enrollees without any identified health
conditions, people with either serious mental illness, substance use
disorders, or both problems were much more likely to have worked
less than 20 hours a week in the previous week. States with Medicaid
work requirements typically require at least 20 hours of week of
work, job hunting, or school.
Just 23 percent of people with serious mental illnesses worked at
least 20 hours a week, while only 43 percent of people with
substance use disorders achieved this minimum number of work hours.
Among individuals with both mental illness and substance use issues,
only 32 percent worked at least 20 hours a week.
By comparison, almost half of Medicaid enrollees without any
identified health problems worked at least 20 hours a week.
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Very few unemployed Medicaid enrollees reported not looking for work
or not wanting a job, the study found.
But people with behavioral health problems were more likely than
those without health conditions to report that they were too
disabled to work, and they were also less likely to be looking for
work.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how specific health problems might influence how many hours
Medicaid enrollees worked.
"Chronic health issues can limit an individual's employment options
due to physical or mental barriers to performing certain tasks,"
said Dr. Ann Sheehy, a researcher at the University of Wisconsin
School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison who wasn't involved
in the study.
"Individuals with chronic health problems may also need to attend
frequent medical appointments," Sheehy said by email.
Health issues can make it harder for people to find jobs and keep
them, said Dr. Olena Mazurenko of Indiana University-Purdue
University Indianapolis.
"We need to conduct more detailed inquiries to examine the
underlying reasons for why Medicaid enrollees with chronic
conditions are unable to work," Mazurenko, who wasn't involved in
the study, said by email.
Work requirements may be unreasonable for a significant percentage
of Medicaid enrollees, many of whom suffer from debilitating health
conditions, said Dr. Kumar Dharmarajan, chief scientific officer at
Clover Health and an assistant professor at Yale School of Medicine
in New Haven, Connecticut.
"States need to create and implement standardized criteria to
identify these individuals and exclude them from work requirements,"
Dharmarajan said by email. "Not doing so may result in loss of
Medicaid coverage, compromised health care access, and unnecessary
suffering.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2WC8j7k Health Affairs, online April 1, 2019.
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