I. Introduction
Medicaid, the government-funded health care program for low-income individuals, has grown to provide health care to roughly one in every four Americans.Footnote 1 This equates to significant federal and state government spending, with roughly $728 billion spent on the Medicaid program in Fiscal Year 2021.Footnote 2 Historically and generally, states paid for Medicaid services under a fee-for-service structure wherein providers received payment directly from Medicaid programs for each service they performed.Footnote 3 This structure inherently places significant administrative and operational responsibilities on state governments. As the number of Medicaid recipients has continued to grow, these burdens have only increased, leading many states to seek alternatives to the fee-for-service model.
One such solution has been the introduction of Managed Care Organizations (“MCOs”) into the Medicaid program. Under this model, state Medicaid programs contract with already-existing Health Maintenance Organizations (“HMOs”), Physician Health Plans (“PHPs”), or other institutional health care insurers to serve as Medicaid Managed Care Organizations (“MMCs”).Footnote 4 These MMC contracts are typically procured via a competitive recruitment process.Footnote 5 Traditionally, state Medicaid plans will pay the MMC a fixed amount of money, otherwise known as a capitation rate, for each Medicaid recipient the MMC agrees to insure.Footnote 6 In return, the MMC accepts full financial risk and responsibility for that recipient’s health insurance.Footnote 7
As MMCs become increasingly popular, they are also becoming the only option for many Medicaid recipients. States may mandate that their Medicaid recipients enroll in an MMC plan as long as they offer a choice between at least two different MMC plan options.Footnote 8 Rural Medicaid recipients need not even be offered a choice between two different MMC plans so long as the MMC plan in which they are enrolled gives them an option between at least two different providers.Footnote 9 As a result, MMCs are now unavoidable for many Americans and are changing the face of the Medicaid program.
II. Why Implement MMCs Instead of Fee-For-Service Medicaid?
A. The Structure of Medicaid
Each state operates its own Medicaid program, with the programs being jointly funded by the program state and the federal government.Footnote 10 For every dollar that a state spends on Medicaid, the federal government matches a certain percentage of that spending under FMAP, the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage.Footnote 11 The FMAP for each state is calculated annually based on a formula comparing a state’s average personal income to the federal average personal income, with higher percentages of federal matching going to states with lower average incomes.Footnote 12
While the federal government specifies certain basic coverage requirements for all Medicaid programs, the majority of program decision-making and operation is left to the states.Footnote 13 As a result, Medicaid programs differ widely, and “variability … is the rule rather than the exception.”Footnote 14 For example, some states still operate primarily under a fee-for-service model while others have fully transitioned to rely primarily on MMCs. Even among those states which utilize MMCs there is significant variation, beginning with the manner in which the MMC program is implemented.
B. How Do States Implement Managed Care in Their Medicaid Programs?
States can follow one of four methods to authorize the operation of MMCs: (1) executing a contract with MMCs via a competitive procurement process to provide a voluntary Medicaid managed care option under section 1915(a) of the Social Security Act (“SSA”)Footnote 15; (2) receiving a waiver under 1915(b) of the SSA allowing states to mandate that Medicaid enrollees receive their care from an MMC for two years before requesting renewal for another two or five year periodFootnote 16; (3) receiving a waiver under 1115(a) of the SSA to mandate that all Medicaid enrollees receive coverage from an MMCFootnote 17; or (4) by creating a state plan amendment as allowed under section 1932(a) of the SSA that allows states to require Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in an MMC for an indefinite period of time until and unless the state chooses to alter the amendment.Footnote 18 , Footnote 19
Each of these methods comes with different statutory requirements for enactment and compliance. Moreover, states are held to different reporting standards based on the authority under which their MMC programming is enacted. Although all states have to provide the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) with programmatic information when seeking approval to contract with MMCs, significantly more detail is demanded from Section 1915(b) states as compared to Section 1932 states.Footnote 20 Additionally, while Section 1932 approvals tend to be relatively unrestrictive, Section 1915(b) approvals are typically accompanied by standard terms and conditions.Footnote 21 Section 1115 approvals are more restrictive still, requiring detailed and specific contracts between CMS and the state seeking approval.Footnote 22 It is generally much easier to implement a Medicaid managed care model under section 1932(a) than the other three provisions, and CMS’ ability to place conditions on state plan amendments under that section is limited.Footnote 23 By comparison, Medicaid managed care models implemented under section 1115 waivers generally require “[special terms and conditions] that are detailed and state specific, and also establish evaluation requirements.”Footnote 24
These are but a few examples of the variation in requirements of states to use an MMC structure instead of a fee-for-service one; although all states operate programs MMC under the same title, the requirements they face and standards to which they are held are very different. Because of the variability between these MMC implementation methods, MMCs can be difficult to analyze and compare. Some programs have more specific and stringent statutory reporting requirements than others, some allow more state autonomy than others, and some require periodic federal approval for continued operation. These inconsistencies can make the overall analysis of MMCs murky and inconclusive. However, many have attempted to assess the impacts that managed care has on the Medicaid space and how MMCs stack up against traditional fee-for-service Medicaid.
MMCs have rapidly increased in use over the last thirty years. While MMCs covered only ten percent of Medicaid enrollees in 1991, that number shot up to fifty-seven percent by 2001.Footnote 25 By 2021, that number had risen to seventy percent of total beneficiaries and eighty percent of child beneficiaries.Footnote 26 The meteoric rise in popularity of MMCs would suggest that they provide proven benefits that make them better than fee-for-service models. However, a review of what limited data is available on the subject suggests that there is little to no evidence supporting this inference. It may be that the increase in MMCs has more to do with the emergence of statutory changes making their enactment easier to achieve than it does with evidence of program benefits.
A. Do MMCs Promote Budgetary Goals Better than Fee-for-Service Medicaid?
MMCs are funded by fixed capitation rate payments, wherein states pay the MMC a certain amount per covered member per month.Footnote 27 These payments are usually made up-front to cover a twelve-month period, and federal law dictates that they must be “actuarially sound.”Footnote 28 The formal definition of actuarial soundness leaves significant room for interpretation. It requires that capitation rates “provide for all reasonable, appropriate, and attainable costs that are required under the terms of [a] contract” and be developed in accordance with “generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.”Footnote 29 However, the federal law fails to dictate that the capitation rate be developed according to any particular standard of care.Footnote 30 Some of the language in the 2020 Final Rule does suggest that capitation rate development may have had a muddied history in some states. As the drafters note, “[the] proposal was intended to eliminate any ambiguity in the regulation and clearly specify our intent that [capitation rate] variation … must be tied to actual cost differences and not to any differences that increase Federal costs and vary with the rate of [federal financial participation].”Footnote 31
In recent years, CMS has attempted to crack down on state flexibility in determining capitation rate payments. Some states were permitted to work with rate ranges as wide as thirty percent when negotiating capitation rates with MMCs.Footnote 32 Such a wide rate range gave states broad power to determine how much MMCs should be paid per enrollee, potentially underequipping MMCs to provide competent care in some scenarios, and giving MMCs power to bargain for more than they needed in others. In short, this breadth suggests that states may have been abusing the lack of specific rate restriction in the federal regulations, and negotiating capitation rates that were not actuarially sound. Furthermore, CMS significantly restricted states’ authority to retroactively make rate changes, admitting a concern that, “these changes are used to provide additional reimbursements to the managed care plans or to some providers without adding corresponding new obligations under the contract.”Footnote 33 Overall, wide rate range variability and retroactive adjustments have made it difficult to cleanly assess how much money is going to MMCs. Some studies also suggest that the money, even if based on actuarially sound calculations, is not being spent where or how intended. A study in South Carolina found that when the state agreed to pay increased supplemental payments for high-risk and chronically ill patients, both the number of diagnoses and the number of non-urgent emergency room visits increased.Footnote 34 Researchers inferred that, despite the MMCs receiving more money for covering these patients, the money was not actually put towards patient treatment.Footnote 35
Assessments of economic effectiveness are further muddied by the fact that many states “carve out” portions of care from MMCs and provide them under a fee-for-service structure instead. One prominent example of this practice is pharmacy benefits, where many states pay MMCs a capitation rate to provide the majority of patient care, and then separately cover those patients’ medication costs under a fee-for-service model.Footnote 36 When states “carve in” pharmacy benefits, and make medication coverage part of the responsibility of the MMCs under the capitation rate payments, there is little clarity on spending and pharmacy costs.Footnote 37 This is largely due to the fact that MMCs often use Pharmacy Benefit Managers (“PBMs”) to negotiate medication costs with pharmacies.Footnote 38 States have little control or knowledge about how much PBMs profit on negotiations.Footnote 39 In 2018, the state of Ohio discovered that its PBMs were pocketing thirty-one percent of what they charged the MMCs, and made $662.7 million on generics in a single year.Footnote 40 Furthermore, after making the decision to “carve out” pharmacy benefits and cover them under fee-for-service rather than through MMCs, the state of West Virginia reported a savings of $54.4 million in the first year following its decision.Footnote 41
Although MMCs are required by law to provide drug coverage consistent with that provided by fee-for-service Medicaid, MMCs typically impose stricter clinical requirements for medication coverage and utilize narrower preferred drug lists.Footnote 42 When four state Medicaid programs carved Hepatitis C medication coverage out of MMCs and instead began providing it under the fee-for-service structure, they found an increased use of the drug and anticipated improvements in health and quality of life as a result.Footnote 43
To date, there is no peer-reviewed evidence supporting the belief that MMCs lead to cost-saving as compared to fee-for-service Medicaid.Footnote 44 Until Medicaid programs are required to collect and produce this kind of data, it will be impossible to conclusively assess whether MMCs improve spending transparency.
B. Do MMCs Provide Better Care than Fee-for-Service Medicaid?
Studies on clinical and health outcomes for MMC enrollees are limited, and the data they report is mixed. Even if there is a dearth of evidence to support the claim that MMCs make Medicaid spending more transparent, MMCs could still demonstrate added value by improving clinical outcomes for enrollees. Both supporters and opponents of MMCs make cogent arguments about the relationship between capitation rates and health care spending. Supporters of the program argue that the capitation rate pay structure incentivizes MMCs to provide better preventive care to avoid footing the bill for high-cost interventions later down the road.Footnote 45 Conversely, opponents argue that capitation rates incentivize MMCs to under-serve enrollees and deny costly care in order to maximize profits.Footnote 46 Unfortunately, an utter lack of data makes these arguments primarily theoretical.
A 2009 study reported that, as compared to their fee-for-service counterparts, adults enrolled in MMCs were 24.9% more likely to wait in excess of thirty minutes to see a primary care provider, 32% more likely to report problems with accessing specialists, and 10.2% less likely to report having received a flu shot within the last year.Footnote 47 Still, the researcher concluded that there were no dramatic changes in health care access between fee-for-service and MMC enrollees.Footnote 48 A 2003 study found that children enrolled in MMCs experienced better clinical outcomes, but adult women were more likely to report unmet need and decreased utilization.Footnote 49 A 2002 study found that outcomes for MMC enrollees were equal or better to those for fee-for-service enrollees.Footnote 50 Moreover, it postulated that because MMC enrollees reported similar numbers of hospital admissions but less overall time spent in the hospital, MMCs perhaps spent more money on preventive care.Footnote 51
Perhaps the biggest differences exist in patient populations with particularized needs. A 2022 study found that fee-for-service Medicaid was more generous with patients suffering from Opioid Use Disorder than MMCs were.Footnote 52 Similarly, a study from the early 1990s found that the health of elderly patients declined more rapidly on MMC plans than on fee-for-service plans.Footnote 53 Regardless, it is impossible to draw a reliable conclusion about MMC program efficacy based on two studies limited in size and conducted thirty years apart.
The reliability of data in this space is especially troubling considering the variable nature of MMCs. Although MMCs vary in their methods of operation even at a state level, studies suggest that because states report on all of their MMCs in combination, rather than on each contracted MMC individually, “aggregation masks significant variation in performance.”Footnote 54 Beneficiaries enrolled in one MMC program will not have equal access to care when compared to beneficiaries enrolled in another.Footnote 55 Realistically, the data on MMC clinical efficacy is too poorly delineated and too dated to make any comprehensive conclusions about the relationship between clinical outcomes and Medicaid pay structure.
C. MMC Transparency (or Lack Thereof) in Reporting and Acquisitions
Many of the biggest issues with MMCs boil down to a lack of transparency. For a program that utilizes so much federal funding, states and MMCs receive surprisingly little oversight when it comes to the utilization of federal resources. In reviewing studies in this space, the emerging reality is that it is nearly impossible to draw reliable conclusions about whether MMCs are effective clinically and economically, or whether they improve budget predictability, simply because we don’t have the data to answer those questions. Despite this ongoing shroud of mystery that cloaks Medicaid managed care programming, federal and state governments continue to fund Medicaid with little noise or complaint.
In late 2021, the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute conducted a thirteen-state study to assess how much transparency existed in the MMC space.Footnote 56 The study’s key conclusion was that both transparency about program information and the quality of MMC care varied widely from state to state.Footnote 57 However, the study also noted that most of the study’s thirteen states failed to provide key basic information about their programs. None of them provided MCO-specific information about Early and Periodic Screening and Diagnostic and Treatment metrics, nor did they provide metrics disaggregated by race and ethnicity, and only three states provided child enrollment data on an MCO-specific basis.Footnote 58 In sum, the paper concluded that the American public does not have “the information needed to tell whether or not MCOs are fulfilling their responsibilities to children and pregnant individuals enrolled in Medicaid.”Footnote 59
Information transparency can provide significant benefits, but the absence of transparency can also be deeply harmful. The most obvious harm is that Medicaid programs might end up paying MMCs too much while receiving too little in turn, with taxpayer money not being spent in a way that maximizes its value and benefit to Medicaid enrollees.Footnote 60 However, some data suggests that the lack of transparency and oversight for MMCs also allows them to engage in unethical and discriminatory practices, including providing disproportionately low coverage to people of color. A 2001 study found that Black Medicaid beneficiaries required to enroll in MMCs showed lower overall service-use than white beneficiaries in comparable situations.Footnote 61 Furthermore, a Texas study found that MMCs made “strategic efforts” to avoid enrolling pregnant African American women because of their increased likelihood for pregnancy-related complications.Footnote 62 The study also found that MMCs which operated in areas with large African American populations were less likely to advertise the benefits they provided for pregnant women, and suggested that this was potentially a strategic decision made to minimize the enrollment of pregnant African American women.Footnote 63 Not only are such practices deeply unethical, but they are also violations of the law behind Medicaid: MMCs are not entitled to government payment if they discriminate on the basis of an enrollee’s health status.Footnote 64 Unfortunately, the significant opacity of available data on MMC operation means that, at least in some instances, MMCs can engage in unethical and illegal practices while still receiving capitation payments without penalty.
D. What’s in It for the MMCs?
The profitability of MMCs varies greatly state by state.Footnote 65 In 2019, one of West Virginia’s four MMCs withdrew from the Medicaid market after determining that being part of the program was not cost-effective.Footnote 66 Conversely, California’s Medicaid program fell under criticism in 2017, when it came to light that its MCOs made a $5.4 billion profit in only two years.Footnote 67 Of course, it is hard to imagine that managed care providers would continue to grow their presence in the Medicaid market if it was not proving profitable. One analysis found that in 2021 alone, three MCOs that were assessed grew their respective revenues between thirteen and forty-three percent.Footnote 68
In practice, it can be very difficult to assess exactly how profitable any given MMC is. This is partially because many MMCs are subsidiaries of large national corporations, some of which do not break out their Medicaid-specific profits and losses when doing financial reporting.Footnote 69 Only three of the five biggest national-scale MMCs provide Medicaid revenue data, and only one of them discloses what percentage of its overall business comes from Medicaid.Footnote 70 The result of this is that states rarely know exactly how MMCs are spending Medicaid funds.Footnote 71
III. MMC Reporting Requirements – The 2016 Final Rule
In 2016, CMS published a final rule that detailed new reporting expectations of state Medicaid programs and MMCs.Footnote 72 The voluminous rule (termed “mega reg” by some) spanned 405 pages, and introduced a number of mechanisms intended to increase transparency and decrease fraud in Medicaid programs.Footnote 73 Acknowledging that MMCs utilize significant state and federal taxpayer dollars, CMS vowed to “adopt procedures and standards to ensure accountability and strengthen program integrity safeguards to ensure the appropriate stewardship of those funds.”Footnote 74 Specifically, CMS identified goals of (1) modernizing the managed care regulatory structure; (2) promoting the effective use of data collection and analytics; and (3) strengthening actuarial soundness and improving accountability.Footnote 75 In order to achieve these goals, CMS introduced Medical Loss Ratios for MMCs, addressed the issue of pass-through-payments, and took limited action on regulating network adequacy standards and quality improvement strategies for MMC programs.Footnote 76
Perhaps one of the most significant changes made in the 2016 Final Rule was the implementation of a Medical Loss Ratio (MLR), which had not previously existed for MMCs.Footnote 77 Originally enacted for health insurance carriers in 2011 under the Affordable Care Act,Footnote 78 MLRs prescribe what percent of income a health care provider must be spending directly on patient care in any given time period.Footnote 79 The 2016 Final Rule established a minimum MLR of eighty-five percent, meaning that, at maximum, MMCs are permitted to spend fifteen percent of their capitation rate income on overhead expenses like administrative costs and company profits.Footnote 80 The rule also authorized states to demand remittances if MMCs spent more than fifteen percent (or whatever smaller percentage the state chose as its MLR) on overhead costs.Footnote 81 Notably, CMS allowed states to determine whether to grant an exemption to the MLR requirement for new MMCs during their first year of operation, indicating a preference to leave decision-making to state-level program leaders when possible.Footnote 82
In calculating MLR data, most states rely on financial data that has been reported by MCOs to state insurance regulators.Footnote 83 Some states go further, requiring MCOs to submit enrollee encounter data (information pertaining to items and services received by Medicaid enrollees) and then comparing that data against the financial reports to assess their accuracy.Footnote 84 CMS noted that federal matching funds to state Medicaid programs were predicated on the states reporting enrollee encounter data, and that Medicaid programs would not receive matching funds for any enrollees whose encounter data they failed to report in an “accurate, complete, and timely” fashion.Footnote 85
The 2016 Final Rule also announced the termination of permissible pass-through payments.Footnote 86 Pass-through payments are one “distinguishing characteristic” of MMC pay structures, and allow states to contractually require their contracted MMCs to “pay providers an amount that is disconnected from the amount, quality, or outcomes of services delivered to enrollees under the contract during the rating period of that contract.”Footnote 87 Effectively, pass-through payments allow MCOs to receive Medicaid funding while bypassing rules and requirements they are supposed to comply with in order to qualify for that funding.
Next, the 2016 Final Rule addressed the issue of network adequacy standards by requiring each state to assess whether they were supplying an adequate network of providers based on time and distance standards.Footnote 88 However, CMS did not go so far as to establish these time and distance standards. Instead, CMS left it up to the states to determine what amount of travel time and distance between enrollees and providers would be sufficient to constitute network adequacy.Footnote 89
Finally, while CMS had initially intended to implement rules requiring every state Medicaid program to initiate its own quality improvement strategy, significant pushback led CMS to settle on requiring that states have a “managed care quality strategy.”Footnote 90 Prior to the 2016 Final Rule, states were required to develop and publish a Medicaid managed care quality rating system (“MMC QRS”) but only to make the technical reports available upon request.Footnote 91 In the body of the rule, CMS made clear it had considered the possibility of enacting federal quality rating standards that every state operating any portion of its Medicaid program under a managed care model would have to follow.Footnote 92 CMS outlined what this federal MMC QRS would have entailed, including a focus on “clinical quality management; member experience; and plan efficiency, affordability, and management.”Footnote 93 However, CMS eventually settled on a policy by which states could opt to utilize the MMC QRS developed by CMS or implement their own version of MMC QRS so long as it yielded “substantially comparable” information to the federally developed CRS.Footnote 94
Overall, the 2016 Final Rule took moderate steps towards transparency and accountability. However, it reflected hesitation on the part of CMS to enact regulations which might be viewed as overly burdensome or stringent. Despite acknowledging issues with oversight, the Rule failed to implement firm national measures that would hold all state MMCs to a consistent standard. While the rule mandated network adequacy and quality strategy standards, it gave the states flexibility to define those terms. Even with this softer regulatory approach, the next administration weakened the 2016 Final Rule.
IV. The 2020 Final Rule and Beyond
CMS Administrator Seema Verma, appointed early in the Trump Administration, announced a close review of the 2016 Final Rule.Footnote 95 One day before the 2016 Final Rule was to be implemented, CMS released a bulletin pausing compliance while CMS determined any new adjustments.Footnote 96 These moves were a reflection of the Trump Administration’s efforts to undermine Medicaid and address complaints that the 2016 Final Rule imposed excessive administrative burden on states and MMCs.Footnote 97 The bulletin was nonspecific about both which states were being affected and what kinds of changes CMS intended to make moving forward.Footnote 98 Several years later, CMS published the 2020 Final Rule, which significantly loosened many of the restrictions established by the 2016 Final Rule.Footnote 99
The 2020 Final Rule amended the 2016 Final Rule in several ways: First, in an effort to accommodate states’ desires to continue making pass-through-payments in order to retain certain providers and transition more fee-for-service recipients into MMC programs, CMS announced that pass-through payments would now be permitted in the first three years of life of a contract being transitioned from fee-for-service to managed care payment.Footnote 100
Next, CMS removed the network adequacy requirements which focused on time and distance requirements between enrollees and their available providers, and instead allowed each state’s Medicaid program to define network adequacy in its own terms.Footnote 101 While the 2020 Final Rule encouraged states to integrate multiple definitions of adequacy in order to ensure access, it left all of the key decision-making to the states.Footnote 102 Not only did CMS grant states the power to determine what level of access to specialists is sufficient for Medicaid recipients, it also allowed states to define what a specialist was in their own terms, asserting that states are best equipped to make those decisions.Footnote 103 Some states choose to define network adequacy standards via statutes and regulations, but the majority define it within the body of their contracts with MMCs.Footnote 104
Finally, the 2020 Final Rule loosened the requirements of a state-developed QRS. Acknowledging that different states may have different administrative capabilities, the rule did away with the requirement that a state-developed QRS yield “substantially comparable” information to the federally-developed one, instead requiring that the information be substantially similar only “to the extent feasible.”Footnote 105 This decision has not gone without criticism.Footnote 106 In the 2020 Final Rule, CMS acknowledged that many “commenters expressed concerns that this proposal would create too much flexibility, limiting comparability and allowing states to implement inadequate rating systems with measures that are not useful for Medicaid populations, especially vulnerable populations within their state.”Footnote 107
Overall, the 2020 Rule reflected a trend toward state autonomy at the potential cost of consistency and program efficiency. Allowing states to characterize network adequacy and quality rating standards for themselves leaves room for inconsistency in definitions, both between state Medicaid programs and between MMCs in the same state. This inconsistency means that beneficiaries may face a lack of access to specialist care in states that choose to enact looser definitions of network adequacy.
Roughly two years after releasing the 2020 Final Rule, CMS uploaded standardized reporting templates to its website, with the stated intention of “help[ing] states improve their monitoring of Medicaid and CHIP managed care programs.”Footnote 108 Reporting with the new templates was set to begin in late 2022, and CMS planned to publish the resulting data on its website to ensure public accessibility.Footnote 109 Whether states will comply with these expectations, and whether CMS will deliver on its public accessibility promise, remains to be seen. Additionally, although CMS regulations clearly require MMCs to be monitored, no guidance has been issued as to how CMS will monitor state compliance with that requirement nor how, if at all, it will utilize that data.Footnote 110
Evidence of compliance with new reporting requirements is mixed. A 2021 study found that eight of thirteen states did not publicly post the risk contracts between themselves and specific MMCs, some posted drafts rather than final contracts, and one posted an expired contract.Footnote 111 All of the states posted their Annual Technical Report, but only nine posted the accreditation status of each MMC with which they contracted as is required.Footnote 112 Furthermore, only one state provided information about how much money it paid each of its MMCs to provide care to its enrollees, and none of the states provided information reflecting how much states paid MMCs specifically for the care of children and pregnant people.Footnote 113 There is an asymmetry between the information about Medicaid managed care that CMS purports to require from states, and the information that states actually provide.
The guidance on MMC evaluation and reporting requirements is a hodgepodge of recommendations lacking internal consistency, and it falls short on requiring the data states really need to ensure adequacy of programming. Luckily, CMS already has a framework after which all MMC reporting requirements could be successfully modeled: the requirements for Section 1115 waiver programs.
V. Section 1115 Waiver Requirements
A. Understanding Section 1115 Waivers as a Model
Section 1115 waivers allow the Secretary of HHS to waive certain Medicaid requirements so that states may perform “experimental, pilot, or demonstration project[s].”Footnote 114 The ACA required states to adhere to strict reporting protocols for waivers.Footnote 115 Every state must hire independent evaluators to assess the demonstration program’s progress, as well as enrollment and spending, and to provide quarterly and annual reports based on that data.Footnote 116 CMS regulations specify expectations for both development of evaluation design as well as reporting mechanisms.Footnote 117 CMS will evaluate state waiver renewal requests in part on these evaluations.
CMS provides guidance to states on establishing a program evaluation design, stressing a “principal focus” of “obtaining and analyzing data on the process … outcomes … and impacts of the demonstration” so as to better “inform policy decisions.”Footnote 118 Among the statutory requirements for states applying for section 1115 waivers is a public notice and comment period before submitting waiver applications; a federal notice and comment period before HHS approves a waiver; a public forum for feedback six months post-implementation; cooperation with an independent evaluator selected by CMS after waivers are approved; the use of quantitative research methods; and annual reporting on metrics including financial performance, care outcomes, and beneficiary satisfaction, which must be both reported to CMS and posted publicly on the state’s website.Footnote 119 Moreover, CMS retains the right to terminate the section 1115 grant at any time for noncompliance with statutory requirements.Footnote 120 One of the primary goals for these requirements is ensuring that state evaluations adequately identify whether or not the demonstration achieves the goals set forth in its section 1115 waiver application.Footnote 121 This in turn impacts whether HHS will approve state applications to renew waivers:
[State Medicaid programs seeking to extend their existing section 1115 waivers are required to present] the objectives set forth at the time the demonstration was approved, evidence of how these objectives have or have not been met, and the future goals of the program[;] … [s]ummaries of External Quality Review Organization (EQRO) reports, managed care organization (MCO) and State quality assurance monitoring, and any other documentation of the quality of and access to care provided under the demonstration[;] … [f]inancial data demonstrating the state’s historical and projected expenditures for the requested period of the extension, as well as cumulatively over the lifetime of the demonstration[;] … [a]n evaluation report of the demonstration, inclusive of evaluation activities and findings to date, plans for evaluation activities during the extension period, and if changes are requested, identification of research hypotheses related to the changes and an evaluation design for addressing the proposed revisions[; and] … [d]ocumentation of the State’s compliance with the public notice process, … with a report of the issues raised by the public during the comment period and how the State considered the comments when developing the demonstration application.Footnote 122
Effectively, to continue receiving federal funding while operating under a section 1115 waiver, states must provide financial data and proof of efficacy as well as evaluations and evidence of compliance with all state laws, including those requiring data reporting and transparency with the public.
As discussed prior, section 1115 waivers are the method some states have used to implement MMC programming, and states that opt for this method are subject to a “significantly greater level of detail” than their counterparts which introduce managed care programming through alternative means (e.g., via a section 1932 state plan amendment).Footnote 123 They are also subject to additional expectations, such as the provision of “extensive information regarding [their] evaluation process[es]” as well as “submi[ssion] of [their] monitoring efforts to CMS” and “submi[ssion] of periodic monitoring reports and waiver evaluations.”Footnote 124 MACPAC, a federal agency that makes policy and data recommendations to CMS, has suggested that the evaluation requirements and higher level of detail required of states that implement Medicaid managed care subject to a section 1115 waiver “reflect[s] that waivers under Section 1115 are for demonstration purposes.”Footnote 125
B. Section 1115 Waiver Reporting Practices & California Procurement Process as a Guidebook
Other than the regulatory path to enactment a state chooses to follow, it is not entirely clear what makes MMCs “for demonstration purposes” in some states but not in others. Considering that there is little to no large-scale or peer-reviewed data suggesting that MMCs save money, improve clinical outcomes for enrollees, or improve state budget predictability when compared to the standard Medicaid provision method of fee-for-service care, classifying MMCs as “experimental” seems entirely appropriate. Indeed, commentators have called states’ enrollment of child beneficiaries in MMCs serving only children “a natural experiment.”Footnote 126 With the lack of data currently available, enrolling children in MMCs is ultimately an experiment in how their health outcomes will compare with those of children enrolled in traditional Medicaid. An experiment in children’s health care quality is an inherently dangerous one. Considering the federal government’s well-established understanding of the unique concerns of personal dignity, autonomy, and need for consent when dealing in human subjects research, this commentary is particularly relevant.Footnote 127
Increasing information transparency is an effective and relatively inexpensive way to ensure and improve MMC program quality.Footnote 128 Transparency provides Medicaid stakeholders with the information they need to reward high-performing MMCs and to hold low-performing MMCs accountable; it also creates an incentive for MMCs to provide the best care possible in order to protect their public reputations while simultaneously incentivizing state Medicaid offices to increase their managed care oversight in order to prevent being viewed as inefficient stewards of taxpayer dollars.Footnote 129
Certainly, regardless of the designation or label that MMCs receive, increased evaluation and analytical measures are necessary. The evaluation and reporting process in place for section 1115 waivers creates an excellent guidebook, could be easily translated into new regulations for Medicaid managed care programs in all states, and would improve program transparency greatly. Additionally, requiring regular review periods and predicating the continued operation of MMC programs on compliance with evaluation and reporting protocols and proof of clinical or economic benefit would ensure that government funds and enrollee interests are maximally protected. Moreover, requiring states to provide data disaggregated by race and ethnicity would increase transparency and help to ensure equitable access to care for all Medicaid recipients.Footnote 130
Finally, increasing transparency around MMC reporting would give state Medicaid programs the information they need to learn from each other’s mistakes and success. California’s approach to MMC procurement in 2022 is a perfect example of this.Footnote 131 During its procurement process, California required that all applying MCOs submit comprehensive information about their operations and histories.Footnote 132 The required information included any and all enforcement actions taken against the company in the past five years (or, in the case of a subsidiary, taken against either the subsidiary or its parent company), the number and outcome of enrollee grievances, and annual quality performance measures.Footnote 133 Furthermore, all of this data was publicly reported with the stated intention of providing clarity and feedback to organizations which were not chosen, and creating new expectations about transparency while establishing a perspective that MMCs are fundamentally public entities with duties of transparency, not private entities entitled to secrecy.Footnote 134
Already, one private MCO which was not selected has appealed the decision, stating that the procurement process was “highly flawed” and that a competing provider that beat it out for a Medicaid contract provided “false” information in its proposal.Footnote 135 Ironically, these allegations of falsification coming to light indicate California’s process is successful. Whether the allegations have merit or not, their investigation will increase transparency and allow California to be sure that it is selecting better MMC providers for its Medicaid enrollees.
VI. Conclusion: More Transparency Is Needed and Section 1115 Waivers Are a Blueprint
MMCs could be improved by a number of interventions. However, increasing transparency requirements and streamlining those requirements to be identical from state to state is a key starting point. Honest and comprehensive reporting holds stakeholders accountable, provides the data needed for reliable studies, allows programs to learn from each other, and gives states the information they need to make informed decisions about the improvement of beneficiary care.Footnote 136 Section 1115 waiver requirements are a readily available blueprint to which some state MMC programs are already subject. Applying those expectations to every state would increase MMC transparency (and accordingly, program quality) nationwide.