Illinois All Kids Program Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services Stephen E. Saunders, MD, MPH Child Health Services Research Meeting June 24, 2006
About All Kids First and only state program in the nation to make sure that every child in Illinois has access to comprehensive and affordable healthcare Allows most of the 253,000 uninsured children in Illinois who need health coverage to get it Helps children get to the doctor before they get sick and before a simple problem becomes a major illness Provides health insurance and prescription coverage at affordable rates Begins July 2006
Qualifications for All Kids 18 and under Illinois residents No citizenship requirements No income limit Monthly premiums and co-payments based on a sliding scale, based on income
Current Illinois Medicaid Program Combined Medicaid and SCHIP Program Income threshold 200% of poverty Family Care 185% of poverty Primarily Fee for Service Voluntary managed care in six counties Over 2 million beneficiaries currently enrolled One year continuous eligibility
Program Structure An extension of current Medicaid and SCHIP program; Medicaid and SCHIP - now ALL KIDS Same Medicaid benefit package (minus non emergency transportation or waiver services) No income limit or asset test, no deductibles Co-pays, premiums and out-of-pocket limits sliding scale 12-months continuous eligibility No pre existing condition limitations Includes dental Provider reimbursement - same as Medicaid
Eligibility Process One application for entire program Application process: Mail-in Web Community-based Application Agent At Department of Human Services local office, located in each county Outreach and PR campaign One eligibility card for entire program
Crowd Out Provisions Must be uninsured since January 1, 2006, or 12 months after December 31, 2006 Exceptions: Parent looses employer sponsored health insurance Newborn Exhausted life time benefit Child covered by COBRA
Crowd Out Provisions (continued) Exceptions (continued) Child was covered by Title XIX or Title XXI and family income changes Custodial parent cannot access non-custodial parents insurance Affordable health insurance definition applies at redetermination
Premium/Co-Pay 200 – 300% poverty Premium $40/child/month; $80/month - max Co-pay $10 office visit $7/$3 pharmacy $30 ER $100 hospitalization 5% rate for outpatient hospital Yearly maximum - $500 No co-pay for preventive health care, e.g., well child visits and immunizations
All Kids Monthly Premium FPLPer ChildMaximum Per Month 200% - 300%$40$80 300% - 400%$70$ % - 500%$100$ % - 600%$150No Max 600% - 700%$200No Max 700% - 800%$250No Max Over 800%$300No Max
Financing Governors key initiative passed General Assembly November 2005 GRF funded – no waivers Cost Savings through implementation of the: PCCM Program – FY 07 for most Medicaid/SCHIP beneficiaries Disease Management Program -July 1, 2006 Disabled Adults Family Health Population with Persistent Asthma Family Health Population – Frequent Emergency Room users Implementing PCCM program mid FY07 Anticipated cost saving secondary to reduction unnecessary ER and Hospitalzation
Provider Buy-In Input into the planning process with monthly Stakeholders meetings 30-day payment cycle for physician services, starting July 1, 2006 Pediatrics rate increases for selected preventive visit and E & M codes - January 1, 2006 Support by ICAAP and IAFP
Provider Payment Providers will be responsible for collecting co-payments under All Kids (similar to private insurance) Providers may elect not to charge co-pays Providers are not required to deliver services when co-pays are not paid Provider will be reimbursed under established rates minus cost sharing co- payments
Reimbursement Rates: Select Examples CPT E & M office visit, established patient ($72.97) CPT – Preventive office visit, initial evaluation, healthy infant ($91.90) CPT – Preventive office visit, initial evaluation, adolescent ($104.96)
Conclusion Healthcare reform is possible with political will and buy-in Medicaid package of services comprehensive and is a model benefit package Medicaid structure provides an efficient platform to build upon – has an established payment, claims processing system and provider enrollment processes
Conclusion (continued) Packaging the program to look like health insurance should further eliminate stigma of welfare Sliding fee scale allows higher income families who lack insurance for their children to purchase affordable health care with the benefit of a large risk pool Outreach and simplified enrollment is key