Former Kansas Medicaid director sees need for reform in many states

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

A former Kansas Medicaid director has authored a paper proposing ways to streamline Medicaid programs that he says are too fragmented in many states.

Andy Allison, who also previously ran the Arkansas Medicaid program, presented the paper last month at a conference of state Medicaid directors.

Medicaid is public health coverage jointly funded by federal and state governments that serves Americans with disabilities, low-income children and pregnant women, and some adults with low incomes who lack private insurance.

Routine enrollment increases along with expanded eligibility under the Affordable Care Act have made Medicaid the largest jointly funded state/federal program in U.S. history, Allison wrote, and by 2025 the program is expected to cover 75 million Americans at a cost of $1 trillion.

It’s time to step back and look at ways states can restructure their Medicaid programs so they operate more efficiently and effectively, according to Allison.

“The sheer size of Medicaid, its expected growth and the significance of state program choices in the coming years — none more substantial than whether to participate in the ACA’s now-optional expansion — have drawn attention to the adequacy of its administration,” Allison wrote. “The leaders of state Medicaid programs face a sobering magnitude of challenges — challenges that will only continue to grow.”

Allison is a former researcher for the Kansas Health Institute, the parent organization of the editorially independent KHI News Service. He led the Kansas Medicaid program for about six years while serving as deputy director and executive director of the Kansas Health Policy Authority and director of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s Division of Health Care Finance from December 2005 to November 2011.

In a breakout box within the paper, Allison highlighted Kansas’ switch in 2013 to managed care Medicaid under KanCare as an example of the high-dollar policy changes Medicaid directors make.

KanCare was conceptualized during Allison’s tenure but implemented after he left for Arkansas. Under KanCare, Kansas signed contracts worth about $3 billion total with three private insurance companies to run Medicaid. The program was expected to save the state $800 million over its first five years, Allison wrote.

Most of the approximately 425,000 Kansans now covered by KanCare are low-income children, new mothers, people with disabilities or elderly adults needing long-term care who have exhausted their personal resources.

Kansas is among the 20 states that have not expanded eligibility for Medicaid under the ACA. Expansion would extend KanCare coverage to non-disabled adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level: annually $16,105 for an individual and $32,913 for a family of four. Currently adults are eligible for coverage only if they have dependent children and earn less than 33 percent of FPL: $7,870 for a family of four.

Allison also wrote about the bureaucratic challenges Medicaid directors face.

In many states, Medicaid’s financial administration is housed at the sub-Cabinet level within large state agencies, like KDHE in Kansas, even though the Medicaid budget dwarfs all of the agency’s other functions.

Medicaid services also are spread among agencies in many states, including Kansas. But when federal officials perform audits, all of the responsibility for errors falls on Medicaid directors, even if they did not have direct control over the error, Allison wrote.

He said Medicaid directors, on the whole, need more authority and better compensation, given the size and scope of the programs they oversee.

States like New York, Arizona and Tennessee have taken innovative approaches, Allison said, making their Medicaid programs standalone, Cabinet-level agencies with high degrees of administrative independence.

“This report makes the case that the populations Medicaid covers and the providers who serve them should not be fragmented,” Allison’s said in the report, “and that a unified Medicaid organizational structure with clear accountability is consistent with a strategy of consolidating payments and integrating services to best meet the needs of states.”

Allison now works as a consultant for McKinsey and Company, which declined to make him available for an interview.

Allison’s report was published by the Milbank Memorial Fund, a New York-based foundation dedicated to improving the health of populations by providing policy suggestions based on evidence and experience.

Scott Brunner, another former Kansas Medicaid director and Kansas Health Institute employee, said he and Allison have long discussed some concepts in the paper.

The Kansas Health Policy Authority was an attempt to gather more of Medicaid under one administratively independent roof, Brunner said. But that approach quickly lost legislative support and the health policy authority was absorbed by KDHE in 2011.

Brunner doubts there is much appetite in Kansas to move back toward the consolidated agency approach recommended by Allison’s paper, especially after the launch of KanCare.

“That’s such a significant change in approach,” he said. “My opinion is that change alone is probably what providers want to have settled and let that kind of sit for a while and absorb what the managed care transition means.”

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Nemeth wins 2015 Goal of the Year

Sporting Kansas City forward Krisztian Nemeth has won the 2015 AT&T Goal of the Year award, Major League Soccer announced on Thursday.

Nemeth received the honor for his stunning solo run and finish in the 83rd minute of a 1-0 win at the Portland Timbers on Oct. 3 (Week 31).

To see a video of the goal, visit http://www.sportingkc.com/post/2015/12/03/sporting-kc-forward-krisztian-nemeth-wins-2015-att-goal-year.

The strike was one of 64 AT&T Goal of the Year nominees when fan voting began at the end of October. Nemeth’s goal advanced through five rounds in a knockout-style tournament before topping Toronto FC’s Sebastian Giovinco in the final matchup.

“I want to thank all the fans that voted for me for MLS Goal of the Year,” Nemeth said. “It’s an honor to win this award and I am very appreciative of all the support they showed me this past year. I look forward to getting back to work and helping the team win more trophies.”

Three days after winning the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in Philadelphia on Sept. 30, Sporting Kansas City traveled to Providence Park in Portland for an MLS match with postseason implications. Nemeth entered as a second-half substitute and promptly scored the game-winner, beating multiple defenders on a 50-yard run and finishing low into the opposite corner of the net from a tight angle. The resulting victory proved pivotal in Sporting Kansas City securing a fifth straight berth in the MLS Cup Playoffs.

Fresh off his first season at Sporting Kansas City, Nemeth becomes the first MLS Goal of the Year winner in club history. His 23 combined goals (16) and assists (7) for the club in all competitions were the most by a Kansas City newcomer since 1996. The 26-year-old also shared Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Golden Boot honors with teammate Dom Dwyer, netting five goals en route to the championship.

On the international front, Nemeth earned eight caps for Hungary in 2015 and helped his country qualify for Euro 2016 – Hungary’s first appearance in the European Championship since 1972. Nemeth scored twice against Greece on Oct. 11 and played both matches in Hungary’s Euro 2016 playoff victory over Norway last month.

MLS Goal of the Year Winners
2015: Krisztian Nemeth (Sporting Kansas City)
2014: Obafemi Martins (Seattle Sounders FC)
2013: Camilo Sanvezzo (Vancouver Whitecaps FC)
2012: Patrick Ianni (Seattle Sounders FC)
2011: Darlington Nagbe (Portland Timbers)
2010: Marco Pappa (Chicago Fire)
2009: Landon Donovan (LA Galaxy)
2008: Will Johnson (Real Salt Lake)
2007: Cuauhtemoc Blanco (Chicago Fire)
2006: Brian Ching (Houston Dynamo)
2005: Dwayne DeRosario (San Jose Earthquakes)
2004: Dwayne DeRosario (San Jose Earthquakes)
2003: Damani Ralph (Chicago Fire)
2002: Carlos Ruiz (LA Galaxy)
2001: Clint Mathis (MetroStars)
2000: Marcelo Balboa (Colorado Rapids)
1999: Marco Etcheverry (D.C. United)
1998: Brian McBride (Columbus Crew)
1997: Marco Etcheverry (D.C. United)
1996: Eric Wynalda (San Jose Clash)

U.S. attorney’s office collects $9.2 million in civil, criminal actions

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom announced today that the District of Kansas collected more than $9.2 million in criminal and civil actions in fiscal year 2015.

Of this amount, more than $6.2 million was collected in criminal actions and $3 million was collected in civil actions, a spokesman said.

Additionally, the District of Kansas worked with other U.S. Attorney’s offices and components of the Justice Department to collect approximately an additional $402,000 in cases pursued jointly with these offices. Of this amount, approximately $12,000 was collected in criminal actions and $390,000 was collected in civil actions.

Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch announced today that the Justice Department collected $23.1 billion in civil and criminal actions in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2015. Collections in FY 2015 represent more than seven and a half times the approximately $2.93 billion of the Justice Department’s combined appropriations for the 93 U.S. Attorneys’ offices and main litigating divisions in that same period.

“Our job is to litigate vigorously and enforce the collection of debts due to the United States and to victims of federal crimes,” U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said. “We’re working hard to carry out that responsibility.”

For instance, in FY 2015 the District of Kansas entered a settlement for a payment of $700,000 from Hawker Beechcraft Corporation (HBC) in a False Claims Act lawsuit. The payment was to settle allegations that a subcontractor, TECT Aerospace, improperly formed wing spars, including fracture critical parts, for use by HBC, the prime contractor in the manufacture of the Joint Primary Aircraft Trainers (T-6A) for the Air Force and Navy.

“The Department of Justice is committed to upholding the rule of law, safeguarding taxpayer resources, and protecting the American people from exploitation and abuse,” said Attorney General Loretta Lynch. “The collections we are announcing today demonstrate not only the strength of that commitment, but also the significant return on public investment that our actions deliver. I want to thank the prosecutors and trial attorneys who made this achievement possible, and to reiterate our dedication to this ongoing work.”

The U.S. Attorney’s Offices, along with the department’s litigating divisions are responsible for enforcing and collecting civil and criminal debts owed to the U.S. and criminal debts owed to federal crime victims. The law requires defendants to pay restitution to victims of certain federal crimes who have suffered a physical injury or financial loss. While restitution is paid to the victim, criminal fines and felony assessments are paid to the department’s Crime Victims’ Fund, which distributes the funds to state victim compensation and victim assistance programs.

The Justice Department’s largest civil collections were from affirmative civil enforcement cases, in which the United States recovered government money lost to fraud or other misconduct or collected fines imposed on individuals and-or corporations for violations of federal financial, health, safety, civil rights and environmental laws. In addition, civil debts were collected on behalf of several federal agencies, including the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Internal Revenue Service, Small Business Administration and Department of Education.

Additionally, the U.S. Attorney’s office in the District of Kansas, working with partner agencies and divisions, collected more than $3.7 million in asset forfeiture actions in FY 2015. Forfeited assets deposited into the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund are used to restore funds to crime victims and for a variety of law enforcement purposes.