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World Health Systems Facts

Financial Eligibility for Medicaid

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"Medicaid is also a means-tested program that is limited to those with financial need. However, the criteria used to determine financial eligibility—income and sometimes resource (i.e., asset) tests—vary by eligibility group."For most eligibility groups the criteria used to determine eligibility are based on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) income counting rules. There is no resource or asset test used to determine Medicaid financial eligibility for MAGI-eligible individuals.26"While MAGI applies to most Medicaid-eligible populations, certain populations such as older adults and individuals with disabilities are statutorily exempt from MAGI income counting rules. Instead, Medicaid financial eligibility for MAGI-exempted populations is based…

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Categorical Eligibility for Medicaid

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"Medicaid categorical eligibility criteria are the characteristics that define the population qualifying for Medicaid coverage under a particular eligibility pathway; in other words, the nonfinancial requirements that an individual must meet to be considered eligible under an eligibility group. Medicaid covers several broad coverage groups, including children, pregnant women, adults, individuals with disabilities, and individuals 65 years of age and older (i.e., aged). There are a number of distinct Medicaid eligibility pathways within each of these broad coverage groups."Historically, Medicaid eligibility was limited to poor families with dependent children who received cash assistance under the former Aid to Families with…

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Medicaid Expenditures

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"The cost of Medicaid, like most health expenditures, historically increased at a rate significantly faster than the overall rate of U.S. economic growth, as measured by gross domestic product. In the past, much of Medicaid’s expenditure growth has been due to federal or state expansions of Medicaid eligibility criteria, such as the ACA Medicaid expansion."Medicaid expenditures are influenced by economic, demographic, and programmatic factors. Economic factors include health care prices, unemployment rates (see the “Medicaid Enrollment” section for a discussion of the impact of the unemployment rate on Medicaid enrollment, which also impacts expenditures), and individuals’ wages. Demographic factors include…

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Medicaid Financing

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"The federal government and the states jointly finance Medicaid.47 The federal government reimburses states for a portion (i.e., the federal share) of each state’s Medicaid program costs. Because federal Medicaid funding is an open-ended entitlement to states, there is no upper limit or cap on the amount of federal Medicaid funds a state may receive. In FY2018, Medicaid expenditures totaled $616 billion. The federal share totaled $386 billion and the state share was $230 billion.48" Source: U.S. Congressional Research Service. Medicaid: An Overview (R43357; June 24, 2019). https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R43357

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State Share of Medicaid Financing

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"The federal government provides broad guidelines to states regarding allowable funding sources for the state share (also referred to as the nonfederal share) of Medicaid expenditures. However, to a large extent, states are free to determine how to fund their share of Medicaid expenditures. As a result, there is significant variation from state to state in funding sources."States can use state general funds (i.e., personal income, sales, and corporate income taxes) and other state funds (e.g., provider taxes,53 local government funds, tobacco settlement funds, etc.) to finance the state share of Medicaid. Federal statute allows as much as 60% of…

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Federal Share of Medicaid Financing

August 25, 2019 Medicaid

"The federal government’s share of most Medicaid expenditures is established by the federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP) rate, which generally is determined annually and varies by state according to each state’s per capita income relative to the U.S. per capita income.49 The formula provides higher FMAP rates, or federal reimbursement rates, to states with lower per capita incomes, and it provides lower FMAP rates to states with higher per capita incomes."FMAP rates have a statutory minimum of 50% and a statutory maximum of 83%.50 For a state with an FMAP of 60%, the state gets 60 cents back from the…

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Total National Health Expenditures in the US

August 24, 2019 US Health System

"NHE [National Health Expenditures] increased by 3.9 percent in 2017 to $3.5 trillion or $10,739 per capita. This growth rate is lower than what was observed in 2016 (4.8 percent) and 2015 (5.8 percent). After a period of relatively fast growth in 2014 and 2015 during the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), 2017 was characterized by slower growth that continued from 2016. In fact, growth in 2017 was similar to the 3.7 percent average annual rate of the 5-year period ending in 2013. These growth rates are the lowest since the early 1960s when health spending was first…

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Total Health Care Spending in the US by Type

August 24, 2019 US Health System

"Exhibit 1 decomposes health care spending in 2017 by type of expenditure. In this breakdown, health spending can go towards investment or HCE [Health Consumption Expenditures]. Investment accounted for $167.6 billion (or 4.8 percent of total health spending). The remainder went to the HCE category, which CMS divides into spending on personal health care, government public health activities, government administration, and the net cost of health insurance."The bulk of the HCE category is made up of personal health care spending, which was $2,961 billion or 84.9 percent of total health spending in 2017. The four main categories of personal health…

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Total Healthcare Spending In the US by Sponsor

August 25, 2019 US Health System

"PHI [Private Health Insurance] spending was to $1,183.9 billion in 2017. Through employer contributions to employer sponsored health insurance premiums, private businesses financed 45.3 percent ($536.3 billion) of PHI spending - the largest contribution among sponsors. Households were the second largest sponsor of PHI spending, financing 31.5 percent ($372.4 billion) of PHI spending through employee contributions to employer-sponsored health insurance premiums (23.5 percent), household contributions to direct purchase insurance (4.6 percent) and the medical portion of property and casualty insurance (3.4 percent). The government had the smallest contribution to PHI spending with state and local governments financing 16.2 percent ($192.3…

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Total Healthcare Spending In the US by Funding Source

August 25, 2019 US Health System

"PHI [Private Health Insurance] had the largest share of total health spending at 33.9 percent ($1,183.9 billion), as has been the case for the past four decades (Kane, 2017). Medicare spending accounted for 20.2 percent of total health spending ($705.9 billion) and Medicaid spending made up 16.7 percent ($581.9 billion). Out-of-pocket spending, which includes all payments made directly by all patients regardless of insurance status, was 10.5 percent of total health spending ($365.5 billion). Spending on other health insurance programs was 3.8 percent of total health spending ($132.6 billion) and spending on other third-party payers and programs and public health…

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