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Center on Budget and Policy Priorities:
Now, without any change in the law, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has instructed states that they may no longer provide automatic coverage to some babies, even though these babies have been born in the United States and are U.S. citizens and Medicaid has covered the cost of their birth.
Many of the babies affected by this reversal of policy will likely go without needed health care services for some period of time even though Medicaid coverage should be automatic.
For other infants, hospitals and doctors will absorb the cost of care.
For all, the new CMS policy is both misguided and contrary to the Medicaid law.
If new mothers are required to file an application and provide documentation (both of citizenship as well as income and other eligibility requirements) before an infant can receive health care coverage, then coverage of vulnerable babies will be delayed.
In the preamble to the regulations, CMS correctly noted that babies born to mothers receiving Medicaid at the time of their birth are automatically eligible for Medicaid for one year without filing an application.
Because an application is not required, no documentation of citizenship is necessary during the first year of coverage.
Posted on November 15, 2006 6:59 PM
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