Medicaid Estate Recovery Program


The Medicaid Estate Recovery Program is a process initiated by state governments in the United States for recovering payments made under the Medicaid program to program beneficiaries. The government recovers the sum of payments from the estate at the time of death of the program beneficiary.
The moral justification for Estate Recovery has been stated as “if you’re receiving a public benefit and the state is trying to support you, you should give back if you are able".

Details

States are required to recover long-term-care-related Medicaid expenses from people who are 55 or older and have received Medicaid, from recipients' probate estates.
States also have the option to recover costs of all other Medicaid services for people who are 55 or older and have a separate option to extend the recovery beyond probate estates, which is known as "expanded estate recovery".
Recovered amounts may include capitation charges as to whether or not medical services were used, as well as expenses directly paid under Medicaid to the service provider for utilized services.
The scope of the recovery includes "traditional" Medicaid, as well as the expanded Medicaid introduced by the ACA.
States may not recover from the estate of a deceased Medicaid enrollee who is survived by a spouse, or a child that is under age 21, blind or disabled. States are also required to establish procedures for waiving estate recovery when recovery would cause an undue hardship.
States may impose a lien for Medicaid benefits incorrectly paid pursuant to a court judgment. States may also impose liens on real property during the lifetime of a Medicaid enrollee who is permanently institutionalized. The states must remove the lien when the Medicaid enrollee is discharged from the facility and returns home.

Historical origin

The states have been authorized to implement estate recovery programs since 1965 when Medicaid first began. However, prior to 1990, only 12 of the states had established Medicaid estate recovery programs.
The federal government made it a requirement for every state to implement an estate recovery program for Medicaid in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993. This was done with primary concern towards recipients who received long-term care services, which had required the applicant to have very low asset levels.
It allowed recipients and their spouses to retain a home and certain other modest assets, to avoid total impoverishment, while they are alive. The estate recovery collected the assets from the estate when both the recipient and their spouse were deceased. The Act also gave states the option of recovering other Medicaid expenses.

Non-LTCR estate recovery and the ACA

View that the non-LTCR recovery is problematic

The view that there were problematic aspects of the interaction of non-LTCR Medicaid estate recovery with the ACA was put forth in various places starting from the time the ACA was passed, and stemmed from the fact that much of the coverage made available under the ACA is Medicaid, which is subject to estate recovery for people 55 and older, in a number of states.
The ACA was designed to make available, and promoted as making available, affordable health insurance to all people without other forms of insurance.
It attempts to make the insurance available by retaining existing Medicaid programs, starting a new class of Medicaid for people whose Modified Adjusted Gross Incomes are no more than 138% of the Federal Poverty Level and with no maximum asset levels, and by offering people with all income levels access to on-exchange insurance plans from private insurers, and offering sliding-scale income-based subsidies for those with MAGIs above 100% of the FPL to 400% of the FPL, provided they are not eligible for either a traditional Medicaid or expanded Medicaid, a Children's Health Insurance Program, or an employer's or a family member's employer's insurance program.
One aspect of this point of view that was raised is seen by noting that the goal of providing health insurance is interfered with if states exercise their option to recover costs of all medical care for people 55 or older. People getting Medicaid do not have the protections normally associated with health insurance.
People 55 or older getting Medicaid are not eligible to receive a subsidy on an ACA on-exchange plan, but do have an option of purchasing an ACA on-exchange plan without a subsidy. However, this option may be unaffordable, since the class of people involved often have a MAGI at or below 138% of the FPL.
An additional problematic aspect of the estate recovery of non-LTCR expenses that was brought up, was the unequal treatment of people below 138% of the FPL under the ACA, who get expanded Medicaid and are subject to estate recovery if they are 55 or older, and people just above 138% of the FPL, who get highly subsidized, very-low-net-cost, on-exchange insurance, which is not subject to estate recovery.
Another aspect raised was that people were obligated under the ACA to be covered under threat of a financial penalty if not covered, but for many people, the only affordable coverage available was Medicaid. Medicaid came often with capitation charges against the person's estate even if medical services were unused; it often came with a risk of large payments for medical services used if the person got sick having to be paid back by the estate. The Federal mandate has been removed since the start of 2019; this aspect continues to have relevance in states which have their own financial penalties for not carrying coverage, which include New Jersey, Massachusetts, and the District of Columbia among states that currently do estate recovery of non-LTCR Medicaid expenses.
In a Jan, 2014 Washington Post article, Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, responded to the issues by indicating "It wouldn’t make sense for a state to pursue a claim on the property of a new Medicaid recipient under the health-care law", and added, “There’s no way any state is going to see it as cost-effective or politically sensible to do that.”
In late February 2014 the Obama administration's Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a letter stating “CMS intends to thoroughly explore options and to use any available authorities to eliminate recovery of Medicaid benefits consisting of items or services other than long term care and related services in the case of individuals who are determined eligible for Medicaid benefits using the MAGI methodology." "MAGI methodology" for Medicaid eligibility refers to roughly those people added to Medicaid in expanded Medicaid.

Argument for non-LTCR estate recovery post-ACA

Medicaid estate recovery documents from the various states that do estate recovery of non-LTCR expenses often explain the purpose of their estate recovery program. For example, an NJ document has "DMAHS pursues recovery from estates to supplement funds available for medical assistance programs and limit the burden upon taxpayers caused by rising medical costs. Funds recovered help provide assistance to others in need."
It can be argued that the justifications were written before the ACA main provisions went into effect in 2014, and do not account for the changes in who is affected by the recovery post-ACA; as well, the ACA may reflect a changed attitude intended in the law, that affordable health insurance should be, post-ACA, available to all as an expected matter of national policy. Some may consider it important to examine justifications post-ACA, under the assumption of expanded Medicaid.
Post-ACA, the argument to continue non-LTCR estate recovery was expressed by an assistant commissioner for the Minnesota Department of Human Services as “The general idea here is that people with assets should help contribute to the cost of their coverage, Many have incurred thousands of dollars of medical expenses at taxpayer expense. That’s the reason for these recoveries. It’s not intended to be punitive.”

Post-ACA adjustments to recovery regulations

State regulation adjustments stopping non-LTCR Estate Recovery

Prior to the ACA main provisions going into effect on Jan 1, 2014, a number of Medicaid expansion states had had laws and regulations which did the non-LTCR estate recovery, and have stopped or limited the practice, though not necessarily permanently:
In addition, there are some Medicaid expansion states which did not do non-LTCR Medicaid estate recovery, and still do not.

States maintaining non-LTCR Estate Recovery

In other Medicaid expansion states which did non-LTCR Medicaid estate recovery just prior to the ACA main provisions, the recovery of non-LTCR persists.