Abstract two readings
Medicaid At 50: Remarkable Growth Fueled By Unexpected Politics Sparer, Michael S . Health Affairs ; Chevy Chase Vol. 34, Iss. 7, (Jul 2015): 1084-1091.
ProQuest document link
ABSTRACT
Medicaid has grown exponentially since the mid-1980s, during both conservative Republican and liberal
Democratic administrations. How has this happened? The answer is rooted in three political variables: interest
groups, political culture, and American federalism. First, interest-group support (from hospitals, nursing homes,
and insurers) is more influential than the fragmented group opposition (from underpaid officebased physicians).
Second, Medicaid provides a partial counterweight to conservative charges of a federal health care takeover
because of the states' roles in administering the program. Third, Medicaid's intergovernmental fiscal partnership
creates financial incentives for state and federal officials to expand enrollment-expansions that these policy
makers often favor, given the program's increasingly important role in the nation's health care system. This
institutional dynamic is here called catalytic federalism.
FULL TEXT
Headnote
ANALYSIS &COMMENTARY
ABSTRACT Medicaid has grown exponentially since the mid-1980s, during both conservative Republican and
liberal Democratic administrations. How has this happened? The answer is rooted in three political variables:
interest groups, political culture, and American federalism. First, interestgroup support (from hospitals, nursing
homes, and insurers) is more influential than the fragmented group opposition (from underpaid officebased
physicians). Second, Medicaid provides a partial counterweight to conservative charges of a federal health care
takeover because of the states' roles in administering the program. Third, Medicaid's intergovernmental fiscal
partnership creates financial incentives for state and federal officials to expand enrollment-expansions that these
policy makers often favor, given the program's increasingly important role in the nation's health care system. This
institutional dynamic is here called catalytic federalism.
Medicaid has evolved from a welfare-based program for (some of) the nation's poor into the nation's primary
insurer for low-wage families. This trend likely will continue even though this intergovernmental public insurance
program has many detractors and few (truly enthusiastic) supporters. Relatively few physicians accept Medicaid
patients in their private practices. Safety-net hospitals grumble about Medicaid's low fees and regulatory
oversight. Conservative politicians see a massive and inefficient welfare program, while liberals pine for a
Medicare-style "single payer." And while beneficiaries are generally happy to have coverage, many worry about the
stigma still associated with Medicaid enrollment.
So why has Medicaid evolved as it has? Why does it still provide the nation's most promising path to universal
coverage?
To examine these questions, we need to divide Medicaid's fifty-year history into five eras and then to consider this
political and programmatic evolution through three lenses that political scientists often use to examine the policy
process: interest groups, political culture, and institutional (governmental) dynamics. At first glance, viewing
Medicaid through any of these lenses suggests a program unlikely to grow beyond its limited roots. Examined
more closely, each lens offers an unexpected explanation both for Medicaid's growth and for its promising future.
First Medicaid Era: State Discretion And Interstate Variation (1965-85)
Medicaid is not a single national program but a collection of fifty state-administered programs, each complying
with a complicated set of federal and state rules.2 Importantly, however, from the program's enactment in 1965
until the mid- 1980s, federal law contained few detailed requirements, instead delegating broad decisionmaking
authority to the states. States used this discretion in very different ways, with different rules on who received
coverage, what medical services were covered, and how much providers were paid. Even states with similar
profiles (New York and California, for example) had dissimilar programs, and one state (Arizona) did not even join
the program until 1982.3
The emphasis on state-based discretion was consistent with Medicaid's roots in "welfare medicine."While
Medicare (enacted at the same time) was a "social insurance" program, administered in a relatively uniform
fashion by the federal government, Medicaid functioned primarily as a program for public-assistance beneficiaries,
and states had long controlled who received welfare and what benefits they received.4 The program also suffered
from a dismal public image (as a stigmatized charity benefit) and was essentially boycotted by many private-
practice physicians,5 given its low reimbursement rates and complicated administrative bureaucracy.
The program suffered another blow in 1981, following the election of President Ronald Reagan, as newly enacted
restrictions on welfare eligibility had a downward ripple effect on Medicaid. By 1983 fewer than 40 percent of the
nation's poor people were enrolled.6 As the program entered its twentieth year, there were few hints that just a few
years later, during the late 1980s the federal government would mandate dramatic program growth, with more
generous eligibility levels, more comprehensive benefit packages, and higher reimbursement rates. That this
Medicaid revolution took place during the Reagan and Bush administrations is only one of its unexpected features.
Second Medicaid Era: Mandates, Rising Costs, And State-Federal Tension (1986-92)
The story of the federal Medicaid mandates is rooted in the election of several centrist Democratic governors in
the South; changes in congressional budgeting rules; and the 1986 election, which gave Democrats majority
control of the House and Senate.
The southern governors had a shared policy priority: lowering the high incidence of infant mortality.7 Their policy
proposal was to add uninsured pregnant women to the Medicaid rolls in hopes of encouraging greater prenatal
care use. The problem was that federal law required that eligibility expansions be across the board and not limited
to a specific population. Congress solved the problem in 1986 by using the budget reconciliation process (no
filibuster permitted) to allow states to expand coverage to pregnant women and children under age five with family
incomes below 100 percent of the federal poverty level. The next year Congress granted states discretion to cover
pregnant women and infants up to 185 percent of poverty. The new policy would presumably improve outcomes
while lowering costs, as savings from fewer low-birthweight babies, it was hoped, would exceed the cost of the
expanded eligibility.
Congressional Democrats (led by Rep. Henry Waxman of California), then struggling against an administration
anxious to cut social welfare spending, decided to again use the budget reconciliation process, only this time to
implement a far more ambitious Medicaid strategy: to mandate that the states dramatically expand coverage
(especially for children), benefits (for children), and reimbursement (for safety-net providers). The mandated
expansions from 1988 to 1990 had some bipartisan support (since many assumed, wrongly, that the increased
coverage would be cost-neutral) and Presidents Reagan and George H. W. Bush went along as well.
State officials generally were opposed to the new Medicaid mandates, particularly since they were implemented
just as the economy was falling into a recession. The combination of increased Medicaid spending (which went
from $41 billion in 1985 to $159.5 billion in 1993)8(p19) and reduced tax revenue forced states to impose cuts in
other programs in order to avoid budget deficits. As intergovernmental tension grew, state officials (first in West
Virginia and then around the country) developed novel strategies to maximize federal funding.
A simple example illustrates the strategy. Assume a state received a 50 percent match on its Medicaid
expenditures. If that state raised hospital reimbursement from $100 to $140 and simultaneously imposed a $30
tax on hospitals, the hospital ended up with a true reimbursement of $110, with the federal government picking up
$70 of this bill.
These leveraging initiatives were especially popular given the pressure (both political and legal) to raise hospital
reimbursement rates to facilities that provided a "disproportionate share" of the care rendered to beneficiaries and
the uninsured. Indeed, payments under the socalled disproportionate-share hospital program grew from $1.4
billion to $17.2 billion between 1990 and 1992, fueled largely by leveraged federal funds.9 Needless to say, federal
officials viewed such leveraging as inappropriate (if not illegal), but the techniques seemed to meet the letter (if
not the intent) of the law.
Third Medicaid Era: Managed Care And A New Medicaid Federalism (1993-2000)
By the time President Bill Clinton took office, Medicaid was out of favor as a coverage expan- sion vehicle. The
program was generating fierce intergovernmental tension, with states complaining about Medicaid mandates and
federal officials complaining about state efforts to maximize federal funding. Meanwhile, liberals of all sorts hoped
that the time for national health insurance had arrived, and while there was debate over the substance of the
universal coverage proposals, there were few voices for another round of Medicaid expansions.
Over the next few years, however, while President Clinton's comprehensive health reform initiative went nowhere,
Medicaid enrollment kept growing.Yet enrollment in this era did not grow because of new mandates. To the
contrary, some of the prior reimbursement mandates were repealed, and states scaled back efforts to leverage
additional federal funding. Instead, this expansion was marked by intergovernmental collaboration rather than
intergovernmental tension.
In 1997, for example, Congress enacted the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP, now called CHIP), a
federal block grant under which states either used federal funds to create a program for children in low-wage
families or used those same funds to expand their Medicaid programs. Seventeen states used the federal dollars
to help finance a separate state program, seven (plus the District of Columbia) integrated CHIP into their Medicaid
programs, and twenty-six did a combination of both.10
Some states also enacted eligibility expansions for adults (especially for parents of CHIP children), typically under
Medicaid's demonstration (or waiver) program authority. (Michael Gusmano and Frank Thompson discuss the
growth of waivers in this time period elsewhere in this issue.)11 From the state's perspective, expanding Medicaid
coverage offered a way to use (largely) federal funds to reduce the number of uninsured people. Federal officials
generally went along, encouraging state flexibility and innovation via the waiver process. As in the late 1980s, this
was a low-profile way to aid the uninsured-an incremental strategy that could succeed in an era in which more
comprehensive reform politically was impossible. Indeed, from that moment on, the waiver process became the
primary vehicle through which states experimented with new coverage, payment, and delivery reforms (a policy
approach that continues today).11
With the enactment of CHIP and the ongoing Medicaid expansions, the number of people eligible but not enrolled
increasingly came to the fore. Many potential applicants were unaware of their eligibility, or they were deterred by
complicated application processes, the stigma of public coverage, or concerns about immigration status. In this
context, state and federal officials began efforts to find and enroll these populations: conducting outreach in low-
income communities, working with community-based organizations and providers, simplifying the application
process, and engaging in social marketing campaigns designed to change the program's public perception. The
number of beneficiaries in both Medicaid and CHIP continued to escalate.
There was, however, a new dimension to the Medicaid expansions during the 1990s: They were accompanied by an
assumption that moving beneficiaries into managed care would both save money and improve quality. The theory
was straightforward. Health plans would provide beneficiaries with office-based medical homes, thereby reducing
reliance on expensive emergency departments. The health plans also would educate beneficiaries on the benefits
of healthy lifestyles and implement various care management initiatives.12
There soon emerged a new managed care industry, as safety-net providers (such as public hospitals and
community health centers) formed their own health plans, joining a number of forprofit plans that operated only in
the Medicaid market and several commercial plans that created separate divisions for Medicaid enrollees.
Meanwhile, several states were soon requiring all or most beneficiaries to enroll: Tennessee, for example,
implemented TennCare, under which nearly one million traditional Medicaid clients and 450,000 previously
uninsured residents were grouped together in a large managed care pool, with the presumed savings from
managed care counted on to fund the state's share.13
Fourth Medicaid Era: Crowd-Out And A Focus On Cost Containment (2001-08)
Medicaid politics changed yet again during the early 2000s, driven by a combination of econom- ics and
elections.The recession that began in late 2001 prompted states to scale back outreach and to focus instead on
cost containment. At the same time, President George W. Bush and other Republican leaders argued that Medicaid
had moved too far from its roots as a welfare medicine program and that it was inappropriately crowding out
private insurance coverage. The crowd-out debate grew especially intense in the summer of 2007 as Congress
considered legislation that would reauthorize and expand CHIP. President Bush twice vetoed such legislation,
arguing that public insurance expansions now covering children in middle-class families were undermining the
longstanding health insurance model, under which private coverage was the mainstream and programs such as
Medicaid and CHIP were intended to be a narrow public insurance safety net.
Rather remarkably, however, like the Energizer Bunny, Medicaid kept going (and growing) even during this era of
conservative control and economic distress.8(p19) To be sure, part of the growth was as a result of the recession
itself: As the economy declines, the newly unemployed (and their children) become eligible for public programs
such as Medicaid. Indeed, Medicaid is a "countercyclical" program because enrollment often rises just at the
moment that states' ability to fund their share of the program (via tax revenue) declines.
What is especially noteworthy, however, is that few (if any) of the policy prescriptions designed to constrain
Medicaid's costs during this era made much of a difference. For example, some states cut eligibility levels (the
renowned TennCare program was substantially scaled back),13 but most recognized that the same funding
formula that encourages expansion during good economic times (since the feds pay most of the bill) discourages
contraction during bad economic times (since every state dollar saved leads to even greater federal dollars lost).
Moreover, most people cut from the Medicaid rolls become uninsured, which means less revenue for their
providers (especially hospitals and community health centers). It often also means less revenue for private
insurers that are covering more and more Medicaid beneficiaries through their managed care plans. There is also a
political toll as consumer advocates and the media cover the human consequences for those that lose insurance
coverage.
Other Medicaid cost containment strategies were equally problematic. Proposals to cut the benefit package
typically targeted optional services (such as dental, vision, and behavioral health care). These strategies generated
interest group opposition, limited short-term savings, and even the possibility of higher overall costs (as
emergency department use among certain populations could rise). Proposals to cut provider reimbursement
generated even fiercer interest-group opposition and were limited by two additional factors: Not only do states
have less and less control over actual reimbursement levels (as managed care plans increasingly make these
decisions), but Medicaid reimbursement already is extremely low, making further cuts infeasible. Similarly, doctors
complained that increased beneficiary copayments were essentially reimbursement cuts (as patients either
reduced utilization or refused to pay).
To be sure, states occasionally did cut eligibility, reimbursement, and benefits, and small copays were added here
and there. There also were efforts to reduce prescription drug spending (through preferred drug lists and greater
use of generics), strategies to reduce long-term care spending (by encouraging home and community- based
services), and a renewed effort to focus on managed care (especially for high-cost populations, such as people
with disabilities and the elderly). Even with these incremental cutbacks, however, Medicaid enrollment and
spending continued to escalate.14
Fifth Medicaid Era: ACA, DSRIP, And The New Medicaid Model (2009-15)
Since 2009 Medicaid has emerged as a core component of the nation's transforming health care system. Not only
does Medicaid now have more than sixty-eight million beneficiaries (with millions more likely to enroll in the next
few years), but it also is increasingly at the heart of efforts to remake and reform the health delivery system. At the
same time, Medicaid itself continues to evolve, and as it becomes more a part of the American mainstream, it
moves further away from its public insurance roots and more toward a public-private hybrid program, one that is
be- coming the core health program for both the poor and low-wage workers more generally.
The change in Medicaid politics was clear shortly after President Barack Obama took office. In early February 2009
the new president signed legislation reauthorizing and expanding CHIP. The economic stimulus package enacted
shortly thereafter temporarily increased each state's federal Medicaid funding by at least 6.2 percent.15 But it was
the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that firmly established Medicaid's role as the nation's largest and fastest-growing
health insurer.
Under the ACA as written, each state was required to expand its Medicaid program to include all otherwise eligible
people with incomes at or below 138 percent of poverty. Medicaid thus would be a universal health insurance
program for the (very) poor-an extraordinary shiftfrom its original focus on the "deserving poor" (those outside the
labor market as a result of age or disability). The federal government would underwrite 100 percent of the cost of
expansion enrollees for the first two years, with that figure declining to 90 percent by 2017.
The US Supreme Court subsequently declared that states may refuse to implement the new expansion without
losing federal funding for their preexisting programs.16 This decision had the de facto impact of converting the
mandate into an option, and as of mid-May 2015, twentynine states (plus the District of Columbia) had
implemented the expansion, while twenty-one had not.17
The guess here is that over the next five years, most if not all of the remaining twenty-one states will sign on to the
ACA expansion. The lure of federal funding combined with strong interestgroup support from providers, insurers,
consumer advocates, and business leaders will be too difficult to resist. Early Medicaid history supports this
prediction: The fiftieth state, Arizona, did not sign on to the original Medicaid program until 1982-nearly twenty
years after Medicaid became law.
The Arizona story is instructive in its details as well. The state's initial refusal to create aMedicaid program was
grounded both in its antigovernment culture and also in the state's extensive county-funded public hospital
system.Why create a new state-federal program when a locally funded safety net already was in place? In the late
1970s, however, the state enacted restrictions on property tax increases, thereby making it difficult for counties to
raise revenue needed to fund public hospitals. In response, state officials eventually agreed to join the Medicaid
program, but with two conditions: First, the entire program would be run through a managed care delivery system,
and second, the nonfederal share of the cost would be paid by local governments. Bottom line: Arizona joined
Medicaid but did so under its own terms.18
Fast forward to today, where several states have conditioned their participation in the ACA Medicaid expansion on
federal waivers that permit significant variation in the scope and nature of their participation. Arkansas and Iowa,
for example, are using the additional federal Medicaid dollars to purchase private coverage on the insurance
exchanges, or Marketplaces, for expansion enrollees.19 Other states that have not yet adopted the expansion are
negotiating with federal officials for permission to implement their own initiatives. Indiana, for example, seeks to
implement a consumer choice model under which expansion enrollees would receive funds in a health savings
account.20
Meanwhile, Medicaid is an increasingly important component of a transforming the US health care system.
Consider some of the key trends now under way: The system is consolidating (in search of leverage and
efficiency), becoming more integrated (as the line between provider and payer blurs), adding new players (from the
pharmacy chain CVS to community health workers), focusing more on care management and population health,
experimenting with new ways to reimburse providers, and seeking to make use of new health information
technologies and so-called Big Data. Medicaid is an important player in each of these arenas, because of both its
size and spending and its innovative efforts to finance system redesign initiatives.
One example of the purposeful effort to use Medicaid dollars to redesign the health delivery system is the Delivery
System Reform Incentive Payment (DSRIP) program now under way in half a dozen states, including New York,
California, and Texas.11 Under this initiative, the federal government provides supplemental Medicaid funding so
that states can reimburse groups of safety-net providers that implement innovative system transformation
projects. InNewYork, for example, $6.4 billion in supplemental federal funds will be used to support efforts in
"system transformation," "clinical improvement," and "population health improvement," all targeted at achieving a
25 percent reduction in avoidable hospitalization use over five years.21
At the same time, nearly every state is implementing some variation of a delivery reform initiative: efforts to
encourage patient-centered medical homes, home and community-based long-term care services, and Medicaid-
focused accountable care organizations. More generally, federal officials are promoting (and funding) numerous
delivery reform initiatives through new programs (such as the Medicaid Innovation Accelerator Program) and new
federal offices (such as the State Innovation Models Initiative that is part of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Innovation). Put simply, as Medicaid approaches middle age, it is finally learning how to use its purchasing power
to influence the health care it buys. And as the nation's largest health care purchaser, Medicaid is going to
increasingly exercise its buying power.22
Medicaid At 50: Interest Groups, Political Culture, And American Federalism
What best explains Medicaid's remarkable durability? Why has this program, rooted in welfare medicine, evolved so
that it soon will cover more than 25 percent of the population, 40 percent of all children, and 50 percent of all
births? How is it that Medicaid is not simply the best coverage option for the poor, the aged, and the disabled but
also increasingly the insurer of choice for middle-class workers and their families?
There clearly are several answers, including the nation's rising economic inequality, as well as policy makers'
growing appreciation of Medicaid's ability to provide decent coverage for populations and services that fit uneasily
into the traditional commercial market. Nonetheless, there also is old-fashioned politics, viewed through three
distinct lenses: interest-group dynamics, political culture, and institutions.
Interest Groups It is perhaps a cliché to point out that every one of the more than $2.8 trillion spent annually on US
health care is income to some person or some organization and that all of the players in the health care industry
are for reform, so long as their particular niche is protected. It also is commonly acknowledged that health care
providers are often dependent on Medicaid funding, and their dependence helps differentiate Medicaid politics
from its means-tested counterparts such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly food
stamps, in which low-income beneficiaries lack wealthy and influential backers. The program also draws
occasional support from large employers (expanded coverage relieves pressure to cover low-wage workers) along
with occasional opposition from organized medicine (although the physician voice is muted since relatively few
office-based doctors treat Medicaid enrollees than is the case in larger medical facilities).
State governments themselves also are an influential lobbying group, often acting as a relatively unified bloc,
assisted by the National Governors Association and similar organizations. The enhanced federal funding for the
ACAMedicaid expansion is the result of lobbying by the states. That enhanced funding, in turn, is the carrot that
likely will lead even the most conservative states to expand their programs.
Less often discussed, however, are the ways in which private insurers often support and benefit from Medicaid
expansions. Here, too, there is a noteworthy evolution and escalation of support. Prior to the 1990s, for example,
only a few states adopted Medicaid managed care initiatives, and most beneficiaries received fee-for-service
coverage. This changed in the mid-1990s, as nearly every state encouraged or required their young and healthy
beneficiaries to enroll in managed care. The insurer presence in Medicaid became even more pronounced
following the enactment of the ACA, especially with state efforts (in Arkansas and elsewhere) to use Medicaid
funding to purchase private coverage on insurance exchanges.
The commercial role in Medicaid is not without limits. For example, the early Medicaid managed care initiatives
generally excluded the older, sicker, and more disabled populations, largely because few managed care
organizations had the infrastructure or the experience to accommodate such populations. In addition, while most
states today seek to transition these highrisk and high-cost populations into managed care, these efforts are
harder, more complicated, and less likely to be done in collaboration with commercial insurers. Similarly, even the
Arkansas premium assistance program exempts the medically frail, the dually eligible (both Medicaid and
Medicare), and those with exceptional medical needs, all of whom are to remain in the traditional fee-for-service
program.19
Over the next several years the lines will continue to blur between longstanding Medicaid managed care, which
started in the 1990s, more recent Medicaid premium assistance programs that have been set up through waivers
granted by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services under the ACA, and the health insurance exchanges
more generally. In this context, commercial insurers will continue to work with providers and public payers in an
effort to keep these markets growing.
Political Culture That slippery concept known as political culture is often cited as an obstacle to efforts at
comprehensive health reform. The idea is that Americans are particularly susceptible to claims that the federal
government is inept. The debate over health reform is often thus a proxy for a more general debate over the role of
government, particularly the federal government, as well as an opportunity to engage in rhetorical debates over the
merits of markets versus regulation. Not surprisingly, the 2009-10 reform debate featured plenty of
antigovernment rhetoric, including claims that the legislation was part of a more general effort to take over the
entire American economy, somehow connecting bank bailouts to health reform.
In this context, Medicaid provides a partial counterweight to charges of a federal takeover: The public insurance
expansions in the ACA are through the state-administered Medicaid instead of the federal Medicare program. This
is consistent with thirty years of incremental Medicaid eligibility expansions, a period during which Medicare
eligibility did not expand at all.
To be sure, the ACA is not a state-based reform: It is a federal law that relies on intergovernmental partnerships.
Moreover, it was the US Supreme Court (and not Congress) that converted the Medicaid mandate into an option.
But there is little doubt that the state-based variation inherent in Medicaid minimizes the anti-big government
argument of reform opponents.
Institutional Dynamics Medicaid's intergovernmental partnership encourages state and federal officials to prompt
and prod each other to aggressively expand coverage and benefits. State officials can claim credit for the benefits
as they shiftmost of the cost to the feds, while federal officials can finance broad expansions as they delegate the
administrative burdens to the states. In other words, Medicaid federalism these days does not trigger Madisonian
checks and balances and government stalemate but instead leads to cost shifting and incremental expansions.
This dynamic, here called catalytic federalism, helps explain the program's key role in the ACA.
At the same time, however, by fragmenting decision making among state and federal officials, the Medicaid model
also provides numerous windows of opportunity for policy makers to implement their policy preferences. And as
the program has grown,manyof these policy makers have become increasingly appreciative of its virtues, many of
which extend far beyond those so far described here, including its role as the nation's primary payer for long-term
care services, its core role in financing community-based services for the disabled, and the ways it fills many of the
gaps inherent in a system built largely around employer-sponsored commercial coverage.
Medicaid And The Transforming US Health System
Medicaid has changed dramatically over the past fifty years. It is no longer the welfare medicine afterthought-the
state-administered little sister to a federal Medicare program presumed by liberals to offer the best path to an
American system of universal insurance.
Medicaid's growth was not inevitable and may not continue forever. From 1965 until the mid- 1980s, Medicaid
earned its moniker as a poor program for poor people. During that era there was minimal interest-group support,
and states generally used their discretion to restrict eligibility, limit benefits, and underpay providers. Over the past
thirty years, however, the political dynamics have changed, and the program has grown exponentially both during
conservative Republican and liberal Democratic administrations.
Although it is not inevitable, Medicaid is most likely going to continue its remarkable growth. The interest-group
support is not likely to fade, even if conservative politicians and underpaid office-based physicians remain
opposed. Similarly, the US Supreme Court decision converting the ACA mandate into a state-controlled option may
provide an unexpected and unintended political benefit, minimizing complaints of a monolithic national program
and strengthening the program's political support. Medicaid's intergovernmental financing structure also will
continue to encourage expansion; the federalist catalyst here is unlikely to disappear. Finally, politics aside, state
Medicaid programs are now using their massive purchasing power to redesign the health care delivery system.
Here again, the program's federalist structure encourages innovations that are likely to meet the needs of diverse
local markets.
At the same time, the program has its own set of deeply rooted challenges. Provider reimbursement remains low,
and efforts to raise rates conflict with imperatives to contain costs. Most office-based doctors still are reluctant to
participate, while institutional providers seek a payer mix in which commercial (and even Medicare) revenue cross-
subsidizes Medicaid funding. The low rates, combined with the welfare legacy, contribute to the ongoing stigma
that is still attached to the program. In turn, the stigma contributes to the large numbers of people who are eligible
for coverage but are not enrolled.
Going forward, Medicaid officials will continue to grapple with the need for better outreach and education, stigma,
and underpaid providers. Even with these challenges, however, Medicaid continues to be the most cost-effective
and politically feasible way to provide coverage to a lowincome population, and perhaps to many middle- class
workers as well. For this reason, it is likely to continue to grow over the next fifty years, in ways hard to imagine
today. Moreover, this is good policy: The program provides decent health insurance, encourages state-based
innovation, and is an important part of the effort to create a better and higher-quality health care delivery system.
Sidebar
With the enactment of CHIP and the ongoing Medicaid expansions, the number of people eligible but unenrolled
came to the fore.
Like the Energizer Bunny, Medicaid kept going (and growing) even during an era of conservative control and
economic distress.
It was the Affordable Care Act that firmly established Medicaid's role as the nation's largest and fastestgrowing
health insurer.
29 States
As of mid-May 2015, twenty-nine states plus the District of Columbia had implemented a Medicaid expansion
under the ACA.
Although it is not inevitable, Medicaid is most likely going to continue its remarkable growth.
Footnote
NOTES
1 Allen H, Wright BJ, Harding K, Broffman L. The role of stigma in access to health care for the poor. Milbank Q.
2014;92(2):289-318.
2 Smith DG, Moore JD. Medicaid politics and policy. Piscataway (NJ): Transaction Publishers; 2009.
3 Sparer MS. Medicaid and the limits of state health reform. Philadelphia (PA): Temple University Press; 1996.
4 Stevens R, Stevens RA. Welfare medicine in America: a case study of Medicaid. New York (NY): Free Press; 1974.
5 Olson LK. The politics of Medicaid. New York (NY): Columbia University Press; 2010.
6 Johns L, Adler GS. Evaluation of recent changes in Medicaid. Health Aff(Millwood). 1989;8(1):171-81.
7 Hallman YN. The southern regional project on infant mortality: a 20-year retrospective [Internet]. Atlanta (GA):
Southern Office, Council of State Governments; 2005 May [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from: https://
www.slcatlanta.org/Publications/ HSPS/infant_mortality/mortality_ web/infant_mortality_web.pdf
8 Truffer CJ, Klemm JD, Wolfe CJ, Rennie KE. 2010 actuarial report on the financial outlook for Medicaid.
Washington (DC): Office of the Actuary, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; 2010 Dec 21. p. 19.
9 Coughlin TA, Liska D. The Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payment program: background an issues.
Washington (DC): Urban Institute; 1997 Oct.
10 Medicaid.gov. Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) [Internet]. Baltimore (MD): Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services; [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from: http:// www.medicaid.gov/chip/chipprogram-
information.html
11 Gusmano MK, Thompson FJ. An examination of Medicaid Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment initiatives
under way in six states. Health Aff(Millwood). 2015;34 (7):1162-69.
12 Sparer MS. Medicaid managed care: costs, access, and quality of care [Internet]. Princeton (NJ): Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation; 2012 Sept [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from: http://www.rwjf.org/en/
library/research/2012/09/medicaidmanaged- care.html
13 Thompson FJ. Medicaid politics: federalism, policy durability, and health reform. Washington (DC): Georgetown
University Press; 2012.
14 Smith V, Ramesh R, Gifford K, Ellis E, Rudowitz R, O'Malley M. The continuing Medicaid budget challenge: state
Medicaid spending growth and cost containment in fiscal years 2004 and 2005: results from a 50 state survey.
Washington (DC): Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured; 2004 Oct.
15 Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. Fact sheet: American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
(AARA): Medicaid and health care provisions. Washington (DC): The Commission; 2009 Mar.
16 National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. (2012).
17 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Status of state action on the Medicaid expansion decision [Internet].
Washington (DC): KFF; 2015 Apr [cited 2015 May 27]. Available for download from: http://kff.org/ health-
reform/state-indicator/stateactivity- around-expandingmedicaid- under-the-affordablecare- act/
18 Sparer MS. Health policy for lowincome people in Arizona. Washington (DC): Urban Institute; 1999 Nov.
19 Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. Fact sheet: Medicaid expansion in Arkansas [Internet].
Washington (DC): The Commission; 2015 Feb [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from: http://kff.org/medicaid/ fact-
sheet/medicaid-expansion-inarkansas/
20 Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. Fact sheet: Medicaid expansion in Indiana [Internet].
Washington (DC): The Commission; 2015 Feb [cited 2015 May 29]. Available from: http://files.kff.org/
attachment/fact-sheet-medicaidexpansion- in-indiana
21 New York State Department of Health. Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment (DSRIP) program [Internet].
Albany (NY): New York State Department of Health; 2015 [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from:
https://www.health.ny.gov/health_ care/medicaid/redesign/dsrip/
22 Smith VK, Gifford K, Ellis E, Rudowitz R, Snyder L. Medicaid in an era of health and delivery system reform:
results from a 50-state Medicaid budget survey for state fiscal years 2014 and 2015 [Internet]. Menlo Park (CA):
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation; 2014 Oct [cited 2015 May 7]. Available from: http://kff.org/medicaid/report/
medicaid-in-an-era-of-healthdelivery- system-reform-results-froma- 50-state-medicaid-budget-surveyfor- state-
fiscal-years-2014-and-2015/
AuthorAffiliation
Michael S. Sparer (mss16@ columbia.edu) is a professor and chair of the Department of Health Policy and
Management at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, in New York City.
DETAILS
Subject: Medicaid; Influence; Politics; Interest groups; Federalism
Location: United States--US
Company / organization: Name: Centers for Medicare &Medicaid Services; NAICS: 923120
Classification: 1200: Social policy; 8320: Health care industry; 9190: United States
Publication title: Health Affairs; Chevy Chase
Volume: 34
Issue: 7
Pages: 1084-1091
Number of pages: 8
Publication year: 2015
Publication date: Jul 2015
Section: MEDICAID'S CHANGING ROLE
Publisher: The People to People Health Foundation, Inc., Project HOPE
Place of publication: Chevy Chase
Country of publication: United States, Chevy Chase
Publication subject: Insurance, Public Health And Safety
ISSN: 02782715
Source type: Scholarly Journals
Language of publication: English
Document type: Feature
Document feature: References
LINKS Check SFX for Availability
Database copyright 2020 ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. Terms and Conditions Contact ProQuest
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0083
ProQuest document ID: 1695969883
Document URL: https://search.proquest.com/docview/1695969883?accountid=27495
Copyright: Copyright The People to People Health Foundation, Inc., Project HOPE Jul 2015
Last updated: 2017-11-22
Database: Social Science Premium Collection
- Medicaid At 50: Remarkable Growth Fueled By Unexpected Politics