Elizabeth S Barnert1,2, Christopher Scannell3, Neda Ashtari1,2, Eleanor Albertson4. 1. UCLA, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Department of Pediatrics, 10833 Le Conte Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90095. 2. Mattel Children's Hospital, Children's Discovery & Innovation Institute, 757 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095. 3. UCLA/VA National Clinician Scholars Program, 1100 Glendon Ave, Suite 900, Los Angeles, CA 90095. 4. UCLA, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Department of Health Policy & Management, 650 Charles E Young Dr, Los Angeles, CA 90095.
Abstract
Aims: We sought to gather experts' perspectives on Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry to identify high-yield policy solutions to improve the health of justice-involved individuals in the United States. Subject and Methods: We interviewed 28 experts at the intersection of Medicaid and criminal justice via telephone between November 2018 and April 2019. Interviewees included Medicaid administrators, health and justice officials, policy makers, and health policy researchers. We performed thematic analysis of semi-structured interview transcripts to identify emergent themes and distill policy recommendations. Results: Three themes emerged: 1) Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry contribute to poor health outcomes and recidivism, 2) Excessive burden on justice-involved people to re-activate Medicaid leads to coverage gaps, and 3) Scalable policy solutions exist to eliminate Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry. Policy recommendations centered on ending the federal "inmate exclusion," delaying Medicaid de-activation at intake, and promoting re-activation by reentry. Experts viewed coverage gaps as problematic, viewed current approaches as inefficient and burdensome to families and systems, and recommended several policy solutions. Conclusion: By pursuing strategies to eliminate Medicaid gaps during reentry, policymakers can improve health outcomes and efficiency of government spending on healthcare, and may reduce cycles of incarceration.
Aims: We sought to gather experts' perspectives on Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry to identify high-yield policy solutions to improve the health of justice-involved individuals in the United States. Subject and Methods: We interviewed 28 experts at the intersection of Medicaid and criminal justice via telephone between November 2018 and April 2019. Interviewees included Medicaid administrators, health and justice officials, policy makers, and health policy researchers. We performed thematic analysis of semi-structured interview transcripts to identify emergent themes and distill policy recommendations. Results: Three themes emerged: 1) Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry contribute to poor health outcomes and recidivism, 2) Excessive burden on justice-involved people to re-activate Medicaid leads to coverage gaps, and 3) Scalable policy solutions exist to eliminate Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry. Policy recommendations centered on ending the federal "inmate exclusion," delaying Medicaid de-activation at intake, and promoting re-activation by reentry. Experts viewed coverage gaps as problematic, viewed current approaches as inefficient and burdensome to families and systems, and recommended several policy solutions. Conclusion: By pursuing strategies to eliminate Medicaid gaps during reentry, policymakers can improve health outcomes and efficiency of government spending on healthcare, and may reduce cycles of incarceration.
Entities:
Keywords:
Medicaid; coverage; incarcerated; inmate exclusion; justice; public funding; reentry
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