The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission, a non-partisan legislative branch agency that advises Congress, the administration, and the states on Medicaid and CHIP issues, met publicly in Washington, D.C. last week.

The following is MACPAC’s own summary of its two days of meetings.

The April 2018 meeting began with session on social determinants of health. Panelists Jocelyn Guyer of Manatt Health Solutions, Arlene Ash of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and Kevin Moore of UnitedHealthcare Community & State discussed state approaches to financing social interventions through Medicaid. In its second morning session, the Commission reviewed a draft chapter of the June 2018 Report to Congress on Medicaid and CHIP on the adequacy of the care delivery system for substance use disorders (SUDs) with a special focus on opioid use disorders.

In the afternoon, the Commission discussed the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) March 2018 proposed rule changing the process by which states verify that Medicaid fee-for-service provider payment is sufficient to ensure access to care and agreed to submit comments to the agency. The first day of the meeting concluded with a review of the draft June chapter describing the status of managed long-term services and supports programs across the country. June chapters on Medicaid drug rebate policy and federal regulations governing confidentiality of SUD patient records were approved at the previous Commission meeting in March.

On Friday, the Commission heard from panelists Susan Barnidge, of the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), and Judith Cash of CMS’s Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services, who discussed GAO’s report on Section 1115 demonstration evaluations and CMS’s efforts to improve the evaluation process. In the final session of the day, the Commission examined issues related to upper payment limit (UPL) hospital payments, which included findings from MACPAC’s recent review of state UPL demonstrations.

MACPAC members addressed a number of policy issues during the sessions using the following presentations to guide their discussion:

  1. State Approaches to Financing Social Interventions through Medicaid
  2. Draft Chapter: Access to Substance Use Disorder Treatment in Medicaid
  3. Proposed Rule on Exemptions to Monitoring Access in Fee for Service
  4. Draft Chapter: Managed Long-Term Services and Supports Programs
  5. Panel Discussion on Section 1115 Waiver Evaluations
  6. Uses and Oversight of Upper Payment Limit Supplemental Payments to Hospitals

MACPAC’s deliberations are especially important to private safety-net hospitals because they care for so many Medicaid and CHIP patients.