Feature

Verma unveils Medicaid scorecard but refuses to judge efforts


 

The Trump administration on June 4 released a Medicaid “scorecard” intended to show how the nation’s largest health program is performing. But the nation’s top Medicaid official didn’t want to draw any conclusions.

“This is about bringing a level of transparency and accountability to the Medicaid program that we have never had before,” said Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Yet in a meeting with reporters, Ms. Verma refused to discuss the findings in any detail or comment on any individual states that performed poorly or exceptionally.

“I will let you look at the data and make your own conclusions,” she told journalists a few minutes before the report was posted online.

When reporters pressed Ms. Verma to comment on the document, she refused to give an assessment of the Medicaid program, the federal-state health program for low-income residents. She has run Medicaid for the past 15 months.

“The idea here is to give you a sense of where states are on different areas,” she said. “The idea is to be used for best practices,” and it’s “an opportunity for us to identify” and have discussions with states that aren’t performing well.

Medicaid covers about 75 million people, about half of them children.

Pages

Recommended Reading

FDA’s Gottlieb floats ideas on Medicare drug coverage
MDedge Internal Medicine
Specialty practices hire more physician assistants and nurse practitioners
MDedge Internal Medicine
Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions
MDedge Internal Medicine
Congress passes ‘right to try’ legislation
MDedge Internal Medicine
Postop delirium management proposed as hospital performance measure
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Keeping patients summer safe
MDedge Internal Medicine
Peer mentorship, groups help combat burnout in female physicians
MDedge Internal Medicine
Effects of psoriatic arthritis not just physical
MDedge Internal Medicine
Looking for lower Medicare drug costs? Ask your pharmacist for the cash price
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA: Opioid prescriptions down since 2013
MDedge Internal Medicine