Medicaid Checklist: Considerations in Adding a Mandatory Eligibility Group

September 21, 2010 (R40490)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Summary

All poor American children and pregnant woman are eligible for Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), although millions are not enrolled. However, some other populations' upper income eligibility threshold for Medicaid is often well below the federal poverty level. For working parents of dependent children, for example, the median Medicaid upper income eligibility threshold among the states is 68% of poverty—less than $10,000 a year for a single parent with a child. (For parents who are not working, the median Medicaid upper income eligibility threshold among the states is even lower, at 41% of poverty—less than $6,000 a year for a single parent with a child.) Adults under age 65 who are not disabled, not pregnant and not custodial parents of dependent children—often referred to as "childless adults"—are generally ineligible for Medicaid, regardless of their income.

Some health reform proposals include provisions to expand traditional Medicaid—to 100% of poverty, for example—regardless of whether one is in a covered "category," such as children, pregnant women, the aged or disabled, as generally required for Medicaid coverage today. This report briefly describes current Medicaid eligibility and presents some policy and legislative considerations if Congress decided to expand mandatory Medicaid eligibility to 100% of poverty through federal legislation.


Medicaid Checklist: Considerations in Adding a Mandatory Eligibility Group

To qualify for Medicaid, potential beneficiaries generally must be a member of a covered group and meet certain financial criteria. Although all poor (i.e., below 100% of the federal poverty level, FPL)1 American children and pregnant woman are eligible for Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), other populations' upper-income eligibility threshold for Medicaid is often well below poverty. In some cases, individuals are ineligible for Medicaid regardless of their income.

Some health reform proposals include provisions to expand traditional Medicaid—to 100% of poverty, for example—regardless of whether one is a member of a covered group, such as children, pregnant women, the aged, and the disabled. This report briefly describes two key aspects of current Medicaid eligibility—(1) categorical eligibility (i.e., membership in a covered group) and (2) income eligibility. The report then discusses some policy and legislative considerations in expanding mandatory Medicaid eligibility to 100% of poverty (regardless of category) through federal legislation.

Who: Eligibility for Medicaid At or Below Poverty

Eligibility Pathways

There are approximately 50 different eligibility "pathways" into Medicaid.2 The primary eligibility criteria include (1) categorical eligibility (if an individual is a child, pregnant, disabled, etc.) and (2) income-related eligibility.3 Income eligibility varies by category. Although federal Medicaid statute4 sometimes specifies that a category's income eligibility may go up to a certain income threshold, some states use statutory flexibility to go higher by using income counting rules that permit, for some eligibility pathways, disregarding various amounts and types of income. Many states also allow certain persons with long-term care needs to qualify for institutional and home and community-based services under Medicaid with income up to, and sometimes above, 222% of FPL; and others with high medical expenses to qualify via federal and state "spend down" rules. Finally, states may use flexibility in Section 1115 of the Social Security Act to waive eligibility and other requirements in the Medicaid statute—for example, to expand eligibility to categories of people not otherwise coverable under Medicaid. Table 1 illustrates income eligibility levels for some of the major categories of Medicaid enrollees. It excludes eligibility levels for persons who qualify for Medicaid because they need long-term care or become eligible via spend down.

In Poverty and Ineligible

As shown in Table 1, American children (under age 19) and pregnant women are already eligible for Medicaid if their family is in poverty. Thus, certain individuals in the following groups who currently are not eligible for Medicaid up to 100% of poverty in all 50 states and the District of Columbia could be affected by an expansion, depending on its structure: (1) parents,5 (2) childless adults,6 (3) the aged (age 65+) and disabled, and (4) certain non-citizens.

Table 1. Upper Income Eligibility Thresholds for Medicaid, by Selected Categories

Category

States must cover persons in category with income below:

States may cover persons in category with income up to:a

Current range of upper income eligibilityb among statesc

# of statesc at 100% of povertyd or higherb

CHILDREN

 

 

 

 

Age 0-5

133% of poverty (FPL)d

No limit

150%-350% FPL Median: 200% FPL

51

Age 6-18

100% FPL

No limit

150%-350% FPL Median: 200% FPL

51

ADULTS 19-64

 

 

 

 

Pregnant

133% FPL

No limit

133%-300% FPL

51

Disablede

75% FPLf

No limit

75%-100% FPL

17

Parents

11%-68% FPLg

No limit

11%-275% FPL

23

None of the above ("childless adults")

Not eligible

Not applicable

0%-200% FPL Median: 0% FPLh

14h

AGED (age 65+)

75% FPLf

No limit

75%-100% FPL Median 75% FPL

17

Source: Donna Cohen Ross and Caryn Marks, "Challenges of Providing Health Coverage for Children and Parents in a Recession: A 50 State Update on Eligibility Rules, Enrollment and Renewal Procedures, and Cost-Sharing Practices in Medicaid and SCHIP in 2009," Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, Report #7855, January 2009. CRS analysis of childless adults in Medicaid and CHIP by Evelyne Baumrucker. CRS Report RL33593, Medicaid Coverage for Long-Term Care: Eligibility, Asset Transfers, and Estate Recovery, by [author name scrubbed].

a. As specified in federal statute and including additional flexibility from the use of income disregards. Although federal statute may set a nominal upper income eligibility threshold for these categories, the flexibility to use income disregards permits states to effectively expand Medicaid eligibility as high up the income scale as they wish in these applicable categories. However, states share in the cost of Medicaid coverage, one of several reasons why states have not fully used their flexibility to extend eligibility further for these categories.

b. Primarily Medicaid but also including CHIP.

c. Includes states operating under Section 1115 waivers under Medicaid and CHIP. 'States' here includes the District of Columbia but excludes the commonwealths and territories which, unlike states, receive capped annual funding for Medicaid (which they exhaust) and are permitted to define poverty at relatively low levels in order to control enrollment and thus their spending.

d. The 2009 Federal Poverty Guideline, commonly referred to as the federal poverty level (FPL), generally used for public program eligibility is $10,830 for an individual and $3,740 for each additional person in the family (http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/09poverty.shtml).

e. Special rules apply to individuals with disabilities who work (section 1919(b)(1) of the Social Security Act).

f. With some exceptions, Medicaid eligibility for this category is tied to enrollment in Supplemental Security Income (SSI), for which the minimum upper income eligibility level is 75% of poverty. Under section 209(b) of the Social Security Act, some states do not confer eligibility for all SSI beneficiaries. Persons receiving SSI may also receive state supplemental payments (SSP), raising income levels of these beneficiaries above 75% of FPL.

g. Tied to states' eligibility level in place for the former Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) as of July 1, 1996.

h. Eligibility for childless adults is only possible through a Section 1115 waiver. Most states do not have a waiver for childless adult coverage.

Certain Parents

Under current law (Section 1931 of the Social Security Act), parents are eligible for Medicaid if they would have been eligible for the former federal cash welfare program Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) as of July 1, 1996. The upper-income threshold for AFDC eligibility in 1996 ranged across states from 11% to 68% of poverty.7 However, Section 1931 gives states the flexibility to disregard income to effectively expand coverage as high up the income scale as they wish through the regular Medicaid State Plan Amendment (SPA) process, which 16 states, as of January 2009, used to cover parents up to 100% of poverty or higher. States have even greater flexibility8 if they obtain federal Section 1115 waivers, which are used by an additional seven states to cover parents up to 100% of poverty or higher. Through existing Section 1931 authority and Section 1115 waivers, a total of 23 states currently use federal funds to cover parents up to 100% of poverty or higher.9

Certain Childless Adults

There is no existing categorical pathway into Medicaid for these individuals based solely on income. However, states can obtain federal Section 1115 waivers to cover such adults. Currently, 14 states use such waivers to cover childless adults up to 100% of poverty (or higher) with a comprehensive benefit package.10

Certain Aged and Disabled11

States are generally required to cover in their Medicaid programs the aged and disabled who receive SSI.12 The upper income eligibility thresholds for SSI in all of the lower 48 states ranges from 75% of poverty (for an individual who has no income from wages) to 174% of poverty (for a couple whose income is all from wages).13 Persons receiving SSI may also receive state supplemental payments (SSP), raising income levels of these beneficiaries. Some states also allow individuals who meet SSI's resource, or asset, test (i.e., $2,000 for individuals and $3,000 for couples) and disability criteria but who have higher income levels as a result of work to qualify for Medicaid. Although some of the aged and disabled may be "income eligible" for SSI, not all of these individuals are enrolled in SSI or Medicaid because they do not meet SSI's resources and/or disability criteria. As of 2003, 16 states and the District of Columbia have expanded up to 100% of poverty for the aged and disabled using an optional eligibility pathway authorized under the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1986 (OBRA 86).14

There are essentially three subpopulations of aged and disabled who could be newly eligible under an expansion of Medicaid based solely on income up to 100% of poverty: (a) those with income levels between the SSI and, for some, SSI plus SSP, and the upper income threshold of 100% of poverty; (b) those who meet SSI's resources test but not its income test and do not already qualify under Medicaid's special rules applying to disabled beneficiaries who work; and (c) those SSI beneficiaries who are not Medicaid eligible because the state uses more restrictive income criteria (would apply only to a subset of section 209(b) states).

Certain Non-Citizens

For purposes of determining eligibility for Medicaid, CHIP and other federal programs, non-citizens are categorized in several different groups, discussed in detail in other CRS reports.15 Three of these groups are (1) unauthorized aliens, sometimes referred to as "illegal immigrants"; (2) legal permanent residents (LPRs) who have been in the country for less than five years; and (3) LPRs who have been in the country for five years or more. Federal law prohibits unauthorized aliens from being enrolled in full-benefit Medicaid, regardless of income. LPRs who have been in the country for less than five years are generally ineligible for Medicaid, although there is a new option for states to cover such children and pregnant women under CHIP. For years, states have had the option to extend Medicaid eligibility to LPRs who have been in the country for five years or more.

In spite of these limitations, Medicaid can pay for treatment for emergency medical conditions if these individuals would otherwise qualify for Medicaid if not for their legal or residency status. In addition, several states have solely state-funded programs that offer coverage to some of these individuals.

The addition of a mandatory eligibility group to 100% of poverty in federal Medicaid statute would not automatically alter the treatment of these non-citizens. To alter the treatment of these non-citizens, additional amendments to federal statute would be required.

Other Eligibility Considerations

A new mandatory group up to 100% of poverty could require states to amend their state Medicaid plans to cover parents, childless adults, and others through the regular SPA process — without requiring waivers or, for parents, the use of "block of income" disregards.

Commonwealths and Territories

Currently, the commonwealths and territories receive capped annual funding for Medicaid, which they exhaust. Unlike states, they are permitted to define poverty at relatively low levels in order to control enrollment and thus their spending.

Aged and Disabled on Medicare

For the poor, is the proposal simply intended to ensure that no one is uninsured, or is it also intended to ensure a certain comprehensiveness and generosity of coverage? The latter part of this question is particularly relevant for those aged and disabled in poverty who are not eligible for Medicaid but are enrolled in Medicare. Expanding full-benefit Medicaid to these Medicare enrollees (a) would not reduce the number of uninsured, (b) would entail additional costs to both federal and state governments, but (c) could expand the services offered to Medicare beneficiaries to include such benefits as home or personal care, care management, transportation, vision and dental care, among others. These issues are similar for the following group as well.

Individuals Eligible For and/or Enrolled in Private Coverage

Will the new group be open to parents and childless adults who already have health insurance — from their employer, for example? If so, the additional Medicaid coverage could be beneficial if individuals needed health care not covered by their existing plan; however, coverage for such an individual would not reduce the number of uninsured and would entail additional costs to both federal and state governments.

An additional concern is "crowd-out"—that individuals who would otherwise be covered by private health insurance would obtain public coverage instead. This was also a concern when CHIP was enacted in 1997 and was partly addressed by requiring that children be uninsured. CHIP also permits states to impose a waiting period (that is, minimum periods of uninsurance before being eligible for CHIP).16 Section 1115 waivers are also used by states to apply waiting periods, cost-sharing and other methods in Medicaid and CHIP for the purpose of reducing or preventing crowd-out. However, under traditional Medicaid (e.g., excluding states operating under an 1115 waiver), such waiting periods are not permitted, because individuals are entitled to Medicaid.17

How Much: Payments to States

Under current law, for Medicaid-covered populations, states receive federal funds at the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), which averages 57% but ranges across states from 50% to 76%;18 states are required to come up with the remaining share of program costs. If this new poverty-related group were simply added as a mandatory group with no other changes, this would likely entail automatically increased federal and state spending, based on the number of new enrollees and the states' FMAP, further straining federal and state budgets. In response, states may consider other ways to reduce spending if necessary. For example, they could cut provider payment rates, reduce enrollment by making the application and renewal processes for individuals more burdensome, or cut back on benefits offered for some or all groups.

To lower states' apparent financial burden attributable to the new group, there are a number of questions to answer:

How: Some Considerations in Amending the Federal Medicaid Statute

There are some additional considerations in adding a new mandatory eligibility group that may overlap with current eligibility groups, particularly along the following key dimensions.

Eligibility

General Income Counting Flexibility

Approximately 50 eligibility pathways into Medicaid currently exist in federal law. States have their own methodologies for counting income for many of these pathways. To promote equity and consistency across states, Congress could require a single federal standard for counting income for the new group. However, would it correspond with the income methodologies of any existing group(s)? If not, it would likely entail greater administrative burdens on states (and perhaps also on applicants) who would be subject to new rules, although it would provide greater uniformity across states in terms of eligibility criteria for the new group. Similarly, although the legislative language may state that eligibility extends up to 100% of poverty, would states be permitted to effectively raise the group's income eligibility to as high a level as they wish through income counting rules?

Specific Flexibility for 'Spend Down'

Medicaid statute permits states (and requires some) to allow individuals in certain categorical groups to "spend down" income on health care to the point they are considered eligible for Medicaid. That is, health care expenses are deducted from income, and the resulting net income is used to determine financial eligibility for Medicaid. Would "spend down" be permitted for the new eligibility group, thus effectively raising the income threshold above 100% of FPL for those with certain health care expenses?

Asset Test

States also use resource/asset tests, which they have the flexibility to alter or waive for some pathways (e.g., families under Section 1931). What would be the resource test associated with the new group, if any?

Other Eligibility Considerations

Currently the only federal means-tested benefit provided regardless of category is nutrition assistance through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as food stamps. The purpose of SNAP is to ensure that a nutritional safety net exists for all poor Americans.

Extending Medicaid to 100% of poverty regardless of category would ostensibly ensure a health insurance safety net for all poor Americans. However, having Medicaid (or any other type of health insurance) does not necessarily guarantee access to health care. State Medicaid programs sometimes struggle to maintain adequate access to primary care and dental care, for example, for their beneficiaries. Thus, the adequacy of provider payments and provider supply in state Medicaid programs are additional issues to consider.

Arguments could also be made for circumstances in which potential beneficiaries should have additional or fewer eligibility requirements. For example, should eligibility for certain adults be tied to work requirements, as is the case in the federal cash welfare assistance program, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)?19 On the other hand, should financial eligibility requirements be more flexible so that individuals who apply to renew their Medicaid coverage are not deemed ineligible because of a small wage increase, for example?20

Benefits

In current Medicaid statute, states define the "amount, duration and scope" of covered benefits for both mandatory and optional services. These benefits vary by eligibility group. Would this new group of enrollees be able to access all benefits available under the Medicaid program, or would access be limited to a more restrictive benefit package? What, if any, additional flexibility would states have in defining these benefits for the new group?

Cost-Sharing

Generally "nominal" cost-sharing is the maximum that can apply in Medicaid for those below 100% of poverty. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA, P.L. 109-171) provided states with flexibility in cost-sharing not previously permitted without a waiver. However, a later law (P.L. 109-432) clarified that the additional flexibility is not available to those "with family income not exceeding 100 percent of the poverty line."21 What, if any, additional flexibility would states have in defining cost-sharing for the new group?

Section 1115 Waivers

Although federal Medicaid financing is generally open-ended for defined eligibility categories and benefits, current administrative policy is that federal financing under Section 1115 waivers is capped so that they are budget neutral over the life of the waiver, with savings permitted by potentially reducing benefits, capping enrollment, etc. The new mandatory group might have a number of potential impacts on new and existing waivers. For example, would the new group's impact on budget neutrality be specified in legislation or left to regulation? For states already covering the group through a waiver, would their current flexibility (a) terminate, (b) last until the waiver's expiration but without ability to renew the waiver, or (c) last in perpetuity?

Impact on Other Existing Eligibility Categories

The Medicaid statute (Title XIX of the Social Security Act) includes some eligibility groups that are no longer relevant. For example, one mandatory pathway in Medicaid statute is "qualified children, a group "no longer needed for any purpose"22 because of other, more expansive eligibility pathways for children. Expanding to 100% of poverty irrespective of category could make additional groups obsolete as well. Thus, adding this mandatory population in Title XIX (1) could be as simple as adding a new eligibility group under Section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII), plus conforming amendments; or (2) could be used as an opportunity to also "clean up" the statute of some obsolete groups by requiring that this new group supersede eligibility groups and rules that are currently used to allow persons with lower income levels to qualify.

Although adding a new group to the statute, as described in the former option, would add more complexity to an already somewhat convoluted Medicaid statute, it might also provide states with an opportunity to streamline some of their income counting methodologies. Rather than apply burdensome income counting methodologies to applicants who would otherwise qualify through lower income eligibility pathways, the former method would enable states to simply enroll higher income applicants through the 100% of FPL group and avoid having to calculate income disregards. This could somewhat lighten states' administrative burden.

The latter option would standardize eligibility rules across the nation and could improve equity and consistency among the states. However, it could be problematic if the new group has a specified income-counting methodology that is inconsistent with what states currently do. For example, Medicaid currently requires states to cover children age 6-18 up to 100% of poverty, and states are required to disregard certain amounts of income and some types of income entirely.23 The legislation for the new eligibility group could require an income-counting methodology different than states use. For example, a child who is currently covered as a "poverty-related child" at 95% of poverty (FPL) may be at 105% of poverty under a new methodology with fewer or less generous disregards. Thus, although it might seem to simplify the situation for the state to not determine the child's eligibility under the prior income-counting rules, it could lead to some individuals losing eligibility if those existing eligibility categories were dropped. However, the legislation could require states to ensure that no current enrollee lost coverage and/or that no applicant was deemed ineligible because of the change, which raises the next point.

The latter could also be problematic if the legislation called for the state to make assessments based on its income-counting methods prior to the new group's addition. This is also likely to be the case if the legislation calls for additional federal funds (1) for those below poverty who are newly eligible (i.e., not eligible under prior rules), and/or (2) for those below poverty who were eligible before but are newly enrolled. Regardless, the state would have to maintain its ability to determine whether these individuals would have been eligible before the addition of the new group. As a result, removing these categories from the statute would provide no meaningful benefit to states in terms of administrative ease, since they would have to process eligibility determinations for those groups as if the prior rules were still in existence.

Figure 1. Uninsured Adults Ages 19-64, 2005

(39.6 million)

Source: Estimates by Julie L. Hudson, economist at Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), using AHRQ's PUBSIM microsimulation model, based on the 2005 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS).

Notes: Excludes those with Medicare. "FPL" is the federal poverty level, which was $14,570 for a family of two in 2009. Family income is calculated using the 2005 FPL and standard disregards of $90 per month for employment expenses and $50 per month for child support, if applicable. Adults who would "still have been ineligible after expansion to 100% FPL" consist of (1) adults above 100% of poverty and (2) adults who would meet program income requirements but are ineligible based solely on immigration status. "Uninsured" is defined as lacking health insurance for the entirety of a MEPS survey "round," typically three to four months. Estimates using different data, methods, or duration of uninsurance may produce different results, as discussed in "Description of the varying estimates of uninsured children who were eligible for public coverage," [author name scrubbed], CRS Congressional Distribution memorandum CD071161, June 21, 2007.

Estimates of Expanding Medicaid Eligibility to 100% of Poverty for Adults Age 19-64

According to analyses by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), there were 39.6 million adults without health insurance in 2005, of whom approximately 16% (6.1 million) were eligible for Medicaid, CHIP, or a solely state-financed program. As shown in Figure 1, if Medicaid eligibility had been expanded to cover nonaged adults up to 100% of poverty, then another 8.3 million uninsured adults would have been eligible in 2005; approximately 25.1 million uninsured adults (63%) would still have been ineligible.

Medicaid Eligibility Expansion: Recap Checklist

Who

Medicaid coverage is not provided for individuals in certain subgroups under 100% of poverty:

Additionally, should uninsurance be a requirement for this pathway,24 in order to exclude individuals already enrolled in health insurance (e.g., aged and disabled in Medicare, individuals with employer-sponsored health insurance)? What about those eligible for employer-sponsored health insurance?

How Much: Payment to States

How: Additional Considerations

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], former CRS Specialists in Health Care Financing, who co-authored the original report. Julie L. Hudson, economist at Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), contributed to this report. CRS analyst [author name scrubbed] also contributed.

Footnotes

1.

The 2009 Federal Poverty Guideline generally used for public program eligibility is $10,830 for an individual and $3,740 for each additional person in the family. For example, 68% of poverty for a two-person family would be 68% of $14,570, or $9,908. For additional detail, see http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/09poverty.shtml.

2.

In 2001, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) identified 28 mandatory pathways and 21 optional pathways. See "Medicaid Eligibility Groups and Less Restrictive Methods of Determining Countable Income and Resources: Questions and Answers," May 11, 2001, available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MedicaidEligibility/downloads/DefinitionElig1902r2.pdf.

3.

For aged and disabled groups, additional eligibility criteria apply to assets (also referred to as resources) and level-of-care need. These latter criteria are not discussed further in this paper. Asset tests can also apply to other eligibility groups.

4.

Title XIX of the Social Security Act.

5.

Hereafter referring to non-disabled, non-pregnant custodial parents or caretaker relatives of dependent children.

6.

Hereafter referring to non-disabled, non-pregnant adults (between the ages of 19 and 64) who are not custodial parents or caretaker relatives of dependent children.

7.

Table 2, CRS Report RL33019, Medicaid Eligibility for Adults and Children.

8.

Waiver authority can be used to cover non-Medicaid and SCHIP services, limit benefit packages, cap program enrollment, among other purposes. For additional information, see CRS Report RS21054, Medicaid and SCHIP Section 1115 Research and Demonstration Waivers.

9.

Table 3, Donna Cohen Ross and Caryn Marks, "Challenges of Providing Health Coverage for Children and Parents in a Recession: A 50 State Update on Eligibility Rules, Enrollment and Renewal Procedures, and Cost-Sharing Practices in Medicaid and SCHIP in 2009," Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, Report #7855, January 2009.

10.

CRS analysis by Evelyne Baumrucker. These 14 states are Arizona, Delaware, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin. These states extend coverage to parents/caretaker relatives/legal guardians and to non-pregnant childless adults. In these 14 states, the adult coverage group(s) are eligible for full Medicaid and/or full CHIP coverage, and/or if a reduced benefit package is offered, the coverage is comprehensive (e.g., services such as inpatient hospital services are included). Some of these waivers are financing with CHIP funds instead of, or in addition to, Medicaid funds for childless adult coverage.

11.

For additional information on Medicaid eligibility for persons age 65 and over and persons with disabilities, see CRS Report RL33593, Medicaid Coverage for Long-Term Care: Eligibility, Asset Transfers, and Estate Recovery, by [author name scrubbed].

12.

The Social Security Act allows for so-called section 209(b) states to use more restrictive methods for calculating income and/or resources, and for defining disability, than are used under SSI rules. CRS products provide additional information about SSI, including CRS Report 94-486, Supplemental Security Income (SSI): A Fact Sheet, by Scott Szymendera.

13.

CRS calculations based on "The 2009 HHS Federal Poverty Guidelines" at [http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/09poverty.shtml] and "Monthly Federal SSI Payment (maximum)" at [http://www.ssa.gov/pubs/10003.html]

14.

CRS Report RL33593, Medicaid Coverage for Long-Term Care: Eligibility, Asset Transfers, and Estate Recovery, by [author name scrubbed].

15.

For example, see CRS Report R40144, State Medicaid and SCHIP Coverage of Noncitizens, by [author name scrubbed].

16.

For example, of the 27 states that cover children at 250% of poverty or higher, 20 have a waiting period for at least the higher-income children (Table 1A, Cohen Ross and Marks). Poor children are eligible for regular Medicaid, where waiting periods are prohibited.

17.

42 CFR 435.911(e)(1) says that a state Medicaid agency must not require "a waiting period before determining eligibility." According to previous federal guidance, a waiting list for "Medicaid-eligible children [would] undermine a fundamental goal of the [Medicaid] statute—to enroll children in health insurance programs for which they are eligible" (Department of Health and Human Services, "State Child Health," 66 Federal Register 2534, January 11, 2001.

18.

A temporary FMAP increase was included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5). States will receive the increase for nine quarters, subject to certain requirements. For additional information, see CRS Report RL32950, Medicaid: The Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP).

19.

See CRS Report RL32748, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant: A Primer on TANF Financing and Federal Requirements.

20.

Under some existing categorical pathways, states accomplish this now by permitting additional income disregards at renewal, as compared to at application. Such continuation Medicaid coverage is also permitted through Transitional Medicaid Assistance (TMA), authorized in Section 1925 of federal Medicaid statute.

21.

Sec. 1916A(a)(2) of the Social Security Act

22.

CMS, "Medicaid Eligibility Groups and Less Restrictive Methods of Determining Countable Income and Resources: Questions and Answers," May 11, 2001, available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MedicaidEligibility/downloads/DefinitionElig1902r2.pdf.

23.

"Overview of Medicaid and Medicaid-expansion SCHIP eligibility for children and rules for counting income," [author name scrubbed], CRS Congressional Distribution memorandum CD071219, November 29, 2007.

24.

Under current federal Medicaid law, such a requirement is prohibited.