Posts Tagged ‘california health care’

The Basics of Medi-cal

Saturday, October 23rd, 2010

Medi-cal (called Medicaid in other states) is a program that helps low income persons and others with limited resources and high medical expenses.

Medi-Cal is different from Medicare Insurance. It is a needs-based program, and eligibility is based on the amount of income and resource a person has.

You should be aware that Medicare does not pay for all medical expenses, and usually must be supplemented with private insurance. Furthermore, there is no Medicare coverage for nursing home care beyond 100 days in any single benefit period. It also only pays for “skilled nursing care,” and therefore does not cover any “custodial care” expenses.

Also, it should be noted that there are a number of other Medi-Cal programs for special categories of consumers. This post focuses on Medi-Cal for long-term care.

Eligibility

To be eligible for Medi-Cal’s long-term care services, you must meet the requirements for: (a) income, (b) assets (real or personal property), (c) residence, and (d) citizenship.

Most of the eligibility requirements relevant to long-term care can be grouped into two general categories:

(1) those classified as categorically needy and therefore qualify for Medi-Cal;

(2) those who are medically needy and may become eligible by incurring medical expenses each month.

These categories include some low-income Medicare beneficiaries who are also eligible for Medi-Cal.

Low income individuals who receive cash assistance from programs like CalWORKS or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) qualify for Medi-Cal automatically. Other eligible groups are those who meet financial criteria but are not receiving cash assistance, including those with specific health needs like dialysis; individuals who are in a long-term care institution; or individuals who would require the level of care provided in a nursing home.

Individuals who are medically needy are those with high medical expenses who may have too much income or property to qualify as categorically needy. However, they must meet the cash assistance requirements (e.g., age, blindness, disability) to be eligible. These individuals may be eligible with or without a “share of cost.” This refers to the amount of medical expenses an individual must incur before Medi-Cal kicks in. Share of cost is determined by income.

Once you pay your monthly share of cost towards your medical expenses, you will receive a Medi-Cal card, which you can then use to pay for Medi-Cal covered services. Share of cost works like an insurance deductible. It is determined by the Medi-Cal Office and is generally defined as the difference between your gross monthly income, minus deductions and the need standard.

2 Million Californians Left Without Health Insurance Post-Recession

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

If you thought that the record high job losses were the worst end result of this recession for Californians you will be shocked after reading this new article from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. Luckily, the U.S. House voted 219-212, approving the Senate’s health bill which can now be signed into law by President Obama. Soon after passage, the House narrowly approved a reconciliation bill that included changes to the Senate bill. No Republicans voted for either measure, roughly 33 Democrats voted against both packages. It remains to be seen how this new bill will trickle down to effect the Californians now without health care coverage… I guess we just wait and see.

“Nearly 2 million Californians lost their health insurance during 2008 and 2009 – years characterized by a deep recession and mass layoffs – bringing the total number of uninsured in the state to more than 8 million, according to new estimates from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

The number represents a 25 percent increase in the number of uninsured since 2007, when 6.4 million Californians lacked insurance, according to the authors of the new policy brief, Number of Uninsured Jumped to More Than Eight Million from 2007 to 2009. Today, nearly one-quarter of all adult Californians lack health insurance.

“These estimates help us understand the scale of the damage inflicted on California over the last two years,” said Shana Alex Lavarreda, the center’s director of health insurance studies and a co-author of the study.

The estimates are based on 2009 enrollee data from health insurance companies and the public health insurance programs offered by the state of California. Those counts were then used to update 2007 California Health Interview Survey health insurance rates, adjusting for 2009 population growth and changes in insurance status.

Researchers found that the number of uninsured likely increased among all age groups, even among children, despite their access to public health insurance safety-net programs.

The hardest hit, however, were California’s working adults. From 2007 to 2009, the proportion of unemployed in California’s workforce jumped from 5.4 percent to 12.3 percent. That increase contributed to the rapid rise in the number of uninsured adults, from 5.3 million to an estimated 6.8 million between 2007 and 2009 – a jump of nearly 6 percentage points.

The harsh economic conditions of 2008 and 2009 reduced the rate of job-based coverage to less than 50 percent for all non-elderly (under 65) Californians, according to adjusted estimates.

Although public coverage among Californians increased from 15 percent in 2007 to an adjusted estimate of 16 percent in 2009, this surge did not offset the decline in employment-based insurance.

“The number of Californians who lost their insurance simply because they lost their job is the clearest indicator yet that our current system of health insurance is broken and that urgent change is needed,” said Dr. Robert K. Ross, M.D., president and CEO of the California Endowment, which, along with The California Wellness Foundation, funded the study.

Recent rate increases for individual health insurance policies offered by private health insurers leave the newly unemployed with hard choices.

“Do they pay their rent or buy an individual policy?” asked Gary Yates, CEO of the California Wellness Foundation. “Few out of work Californians can afford to do both. As a result, many unemployed Californians may go without essential health coverage, increasing the health risk to themselves and their families and the costs of our emergency care system.”

Read the Original Brief

Q & A

Thanks to the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research for sharing this important article with us.