Copays take effect for immigrant health programs as cost estimates
continue to decline
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[February 05, 2024]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
Cost estimates for a pair of state-funded health care programs serving
certain low-income noncitizens have declined by tens of millions of
dollars in recent months as the state rolled out new copay and
co-insurance requirements this week.
The Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults and Health Benefits for
Immigrant Seniors programs provide state-funded Medicaid-like benefits
to individuals aged 42 and over who would otherwise be eligible for the
federal low-income health care program if not for their immigration
status.
That includes those in the U.S. without legal permission and those who
have obtained a green card but not yet completed a five-year waiting
period to earn federal benefits. Individuals who have applied for asylum
or sanctuary in the U.S. – which includes many of the more than 34,000
migrants bused to Illinois from Texas in the last year-and-a-half – more
likely qualify for other preexisting state or federal benefits.
Advocates for the programs contend they are not only lifesaving but also
cost-saving in the long-run as they give individuals access to
preventative care rather than making them reliant upon expensive
emergency room visits to treat conditions that worsen due to lack of
care. Opponents of the programs, namely Republican lawmakers, have
criticized them as an expensive enticement for people illegally residing
in the U.S. to relocate to Illinois.
The programs, originally launched for those aged 65 and older in 2020
then expanded in waves, became a sticking point in state budget
negotiations last year when Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration projected
their single-year costs to exceed $1 billion.
But current estimates now project the programs will cost $773 million in
the current fiscal year. Those estimates, however, have declined by $60
million since August, the month following the Pritzker administration’s
initial announcement of certain cost-saving measures.
Cost-saving measures
Ultimately, the contentious budget negotiations ended last year with
lawmakers allocating $500 million in funding to the program from the
state’s General Revenue Fund and giving the Pritzker administration
authority to limit program enrollment and costs.
The administration in turn paused enrollment in HBIA as of July 1 and in
HBIS as of Nov. 6. The two programs now collectively serve about 69,000
people aged 42 and older, and enrollment remains paused.
In January, the administration also began moving enrollees to the
state’s Medicaid managed care program, which connects individuals with
private insurers who contract with the state to oversee routine and
follow-up health care.
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, which administers the
programs, expects the managed care transition to be complete in April.
After months of delays, the department announced that copays and
co-insurance for certain services went live Thursday.
“Most services covered by the HBIA and HBIS programs … will continue to
be free for customers, including primary care visits, prescription
medications and vaccinations at a pharmacy or doctor’s office,” the
department said in a news release. “The new copays and co-insurance will
apply to the use of non-emergency hospital or surgical center services,
like nonemergent elective surgeries, physical therapy and lab work.”
Enrollees may see a $250 copay per nonemergency inpatient
hospitalization and a 10 percent charge for nonemergency outpatient
services or care received from ambulatory surgical treatment centers.
It’s a major difference from the federally funded Medicaid program,
which does not require copays.
Whether individuals are subject to those copays and co-insurance
requirements will depend on if they have already been enrolled in
managed care and which managed care organization is serving them,
according to the department. The state reimburses managed care
organizations at a specified rate, giving the MCOs authority to charge
copays or co-insurance without requiring them to do so.
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Data from the Department on Healthcare and Family Services shows the
per-patient costs for a pair of health programs that serve certain
immigrant populations have declined in recent months as the JB
Pritzker administration has initiated cost-saving measures. (Capitol
News Illinois graphic by Jerry Nowicki)
CountyCare in Cook County, where most program enrollees are located, is
waiving all copays and coinsurance requirements, per the department.
The department announced it no longer plans to issue a copay for
emergency room visits.
The Healthy Illinois Campaign, a statewide coalition of immigrant and
health care advocates, has pushed for an expansion of the program and
fought any efforts to limit it or install cost-sharing.
The group’s director, Tovia Siegel, praised the administration’s
decision not to charge a copay for emergency room care but said the
other copays “place a significant burden on both providers and patients,
limiting access to healthcare for Illinois’ immigrant community.”
The copays, advocates noted, are charged to medical providers by MCOs,
but the providers are required to collect them from patients, creating
an administrative burden. As well, they warned that individuals may
choose to defer certain “elective” procedures, such as a colonoscopy,
due to the copay requirement, potentially undermining the program’s
preventative care goals.
“We urge the Department of Healthcare and Family Services and Managed
Care Organizations to reconsider implementing these charges, which will
generate a relatively small amount of money but can be the difference
between life and death for low-income Illinoisans,” Siegel said in a
statement.
Costs declining
The programs’ cost estimates, meanwhile, have been on the decline amid
the administration’s savings measures. In September, an HFS analysis
estimated the programs’ 12-month cost to be $832 million for the fiscal
year that ends June 30. But the department’s latest estimate, published
Jan. 9, now projects the programs will cost $773 million. In total, the
state has spent nearly $330 million collectively on the programs in the
first six months of the fiscal year, per the January estimate.
The department’s data shows average monthly costs for the programs
decreased steadily between August and December, from $72.7 million to
$45.3 million.
When the state announced its enrollment caps, it noted per-enrollee
costs were higher among the HBIA and HBIS populations “due to more
prevalent, untreated chronic conditions and higher hospital costs.” With
the caps in place, the program is now populated with individuals who’ve
been receiving routine care, rather than a steady stream of new
enrollees who are more expensive to insure.
Thus, the per-patient monthly costs have also declined. In August,
per-patient costs reached $1,232 for enrolled individuals aged 65 and
older, $1,295 for those aged 55-64, and $844 for those aged 42-54. In
December, those numbers declined to $778, $805 and $541, respectively.
Advocates pointed to those declines as evidence that the programs are
accomplishing their intended goal of replacing costly emergency care
with more cost-efficient preventative services.
“While there are several potential explanations, cost decreases in the
HBIA and HBIS programs can be an indication that enrollees are receiving
more preventative care and therefore needing less intensive, expensive
care,” Siegel said. “However, the implementation of copays could
threaten these gains as enrollees are dissuaded from receiving this
cost-saving preventative care.”
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
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It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
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