Feature

Thousands mistakenly enrolled during state’s Medicaid expansion, feds find


 


California’s Department of Health Care Services, which runs Medi-Cal, said in a statement that it agreed with nearly all of the auditors’ recommendations and that the agency “has taken steps to address all of the findings.”

In a written response to the inspector general, California officials said several computer upgrades were made after the audit period and before publication of the report that should improve the accuracy of eligibility decisions.

Among the 150 expansion enrollees analyzed in detail, 75%, or 112, were deemed eligible for the Medicaid program in California. Auditors discovered a variety of problems with the other 38 enrollees.

During the audit period, 12 enrollees in the sample group had incomes above 138% of the federal poverty level, making them ineligible financially for public assistance, according to the report.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Office staff cohesiveness remains important
MDedge Psychiatry
MedPAC to Congress: Eliminate MIPS
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Three daily meals best in type 2 diabetes
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: MedPAC targets Medicare’s pay plans
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Stem cells may reverse premature menopause
MDedge Psychiatry
Women in medicine shout #MeToo about sexual harassment at work
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Avoid warfarin’s polypharmacy perils
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Treating H. pylori slashed new gastric cancers
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Is kratom the answer to the opioid crisis?
MDedge Psychiatry
MDedge Daily News: Why most heart failure may be preventable
MDedge Psychiatry