There are three things that the state is required to develop: 1) Implementation Plan 2) Monitoring Protocol 3) Evaluation Plan
This evaluation plan is OPEN FOR PUBLIC COMMENT until August 26th.
3/ I would recommend that any health journos out there that this is a fundamentally important document for covering the implementation of the work requirement waiver.
This will determine what data is used and what is made available, publicly, and at what interval.
4/ What we said we wanted in an evaluation plan:
- Issues in administration
- Coverage levels
- Health outcomes
- Financial information (impact on local govts)
- Regular releases of data available on at least county level
...just to name a few.
5/ Methodology of the state:
Quantitative and qualitative, using survey, focus group, interview and admin data through 2025.
6/ The comparison will be between expansion adults who won't be exempt and parents who have no other exemption other than being a parent.
The populations differ in key ways, particularly work/marital status, but the state will adjust as things unfold.
7/ Timeline in graphic.
OF NOTE: @GRCOhio will be the state's independent evaluator.
They have a history with ODM, but this is a good approach and an independent evaluator is something we called for in comments.
The data plan will include info on participants, even if they lose coverage. The qualitative data will be based on sex, employment, demographics and geographics resulting in 32 distinct research groups.
@GRCOhio 9/ Law requires that there be hypotheses studied. The research questions are tied to each of these hypotheses that the waiver will
1) Are waiver enrollees more or less likely to be employed? 2) Do enrollees who first participate in other qualifying activities more likely to be employed? 3) Types of jobs? 4) Impact on educational attainment?
1) More private coverage (ESI and Marketplace)? 2) Employment tied to ESI? 3) Take up rates of ESI when offered? 4) ESI sustained? 5) Afford ESI? 6) More likely to get Marketplace coverage?
1) Are outcomes better? 2) What are the trajectories of outcomes? 3) If people don't comply, what's the relationship to outcomes? 4) What types of activities do people engage in to maintain coverage? 5) How do activities change over time?
6) What are common barriers to compliance? 7) Did beneficiaries get the support they needed to comply (job assistance, child care, etc)? 8) Do beneficiaries understand the requirement? 9) How many have to actively report?
10) What is the state doing to reduce beneficiary burden? 11) Rate of "good cause" exemptions? 12) Why beneficiaries disenroll 13) For those who disenrolled bc of non-compliance, are the more likely to re-enroll?
@GRCOhio 28/ They mapped out the focus group seating arrangement.
@GRCOhio 29/ Some of the limitations the state sees:
- It's not randomized, though they tried to accommodate
- Lot's of churn
- It'll be hard to stay in touch with people
- The state won't know all the exemptions in its admin data (hmm).
@GRCOhio 30/ Now here are all the metrics they will use in the evaluation!!!
@GRCOhio 31/ I have to dig deeper, but here are some of my initial takeaways...
1) Why didn't we see an implementation plan or the monitoring protocol? 2) Which of these data elements will be available publicly and in what format? At what interval? This should be explicitly defined.
3) What and how "churn" is documented is key. The relationships between chrun, group, income, etc., are the basis of the examination. 4) Costs are accounted (yay!) but what about local govt? What about the average PMPM? Would like to see this built out.
Generally, this is a pretty robust design with deep potential. That said, the most important thing will be the availability of the data, publicly. Some report at the end (which is what this is describing) won't cut it.
🧵 Last thing - I know I can estimate, but why do we not see numbers (volume) and only rates? If 92% of target population disenrolls, how many people are we talking about, really?
That's it.
Read the document. Submit your comments. 🧵
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Last night, @SteveHuffmanOH suggested that there are "600k Ohioans on Medicaid that are not eligible for Medicaid" and that "we need to remove those people... so they go back to work."
Here are some numbers that stand in contrast to that claim.
/1
@MikeDeWine has stated that looking at the plans' contracts to improve HEDIS performance is on the table. Good. They should be at risk for improving the screening rates. cc: @JoEllenCorrigan
For example: across all of the adolescent metrics tracked by the state, NO plan achieved above the 75th percentile in any given measure:
DAY LONG THREAD: Today may be one of the more influential #Medicaid policy days for the next few years, even if it doesn’t feel like it. Here’s why... /1
Later today, there will be the first hearing on Ohio’s new 1115 IMD waiver. That’s a very big deal. @AdamWhite720 and I wrote about that here: communitysolutions.com/imd-waivers-op… More on IMD later today. Back to #JMOC... /3