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Medicaid Work Requirement Vendor Discounts
Table of Contents
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced on January 25, 2018, that ten technology vendors pledged $600 million in discounts to states adopting Medicaid work requirements. This indicates the potential profitability these companies foresee in assisting states with implementing the new policy.
The Trump Management’s Initiative
The discounts were offered as part of the Trump administration’s push to reshape Medicaid eligibility rules, requiring able-bodied adults to work, volunteer, or participate in job training programs to maintain coverage. Mehmet Oz, then-administrator of CMS, highlighted the vendor commitments as evidence of the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of the work requirement waivers. CMS Press Release
The administration argued that these requirements would encourage self-sufficiency and reduce Medicaid rolls, even though critics contended they would lead to coverage losses for vulnerable populations.
Participating Companies and Discount Amounts
ten companies offered the discounts, with varying amounts pledged:
- Accenture: $85 million
- Conduent: $75 million
- Deloitte: $70 million
- Ernst & Young: $60 million
- general Dynamics Details Technology: $50 million
- Health Management Systems: $40 million
- IBM: $60 million
- MAXIMUS: $80 million
- Optum: $70 million
- SAS Institute: $30 million
These companies provide a range of services, including eligibility verification, data analytics, and case management, all of which would be necessary for states to track and enforce work requirements. Modern Healthcare Report
State Implementation and Waivers
States seeking to implement Medicaid work requirements needed to obtain waivers from CMS. The first states to receive waivers were Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, New Hampshire, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, and Wisconsin.
However, many of these waivers faced legal challenges, and some were ultimately overturned by courts. Such as, in February 2020, a federal appeals court vacated the work requirement waiver for Arkansas, citing insufficient consideration of the potential impact on beneficiaries.
Legal Challenges and Subsequent Developments
Legal challenges to Medicaid work requirements primarily focused on whether the waivers were consistent with the goals of the Medicaid program,which is intended to provide healthcare coverage to low-income individuals and families
