Tag: medicaid

Statement on HB 2387 veto

Statement of David Jordan, president and CEO of the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund, on Governor Kelly’s veto of HB 2387:

“Vetoing this legislation protects Kansas taxpayers and the health of Kansans. Enabling the non-partisan reprocurement process of the state’s $3.9 billion Medicaid managed care contracts to continue as planned ensures our program is able to be designed to best meet the needs of our most vulnerable neighbors. The veto also protects public health. I appreciate Governor Kelly’s leadership in vetoing this bill and for putting Kansans above politics.“

Postpartum coverage extension is great news for Kansas families

Through its new budget, Kansas is taking an important step in improving maternal and infant health outcomes. Today, Governor Laura Kelly signed the new budget bill which contains funding for extending postpartum KanCare (Medicaid) coverage from 60 days to 12 months. 

More than 30% of Kansas births are covered by KanCare. Extending postpartum coverage will allow mothers to access early interventions and coordinated care, preventing postpartum complications that arise more than 60 days after delivery. Now more mothers will have health insurance and access to care in the first full year postpartum when the mother is still at risk for complications, including pregnancy-related death. 

In response to the COVID-19 public health emergency, a temporary federal expansion of postpartum benefits to 12 months has allowed mothers to access or continue accessing health care and mental health services that provide both mother and child with a healthier start to life. A significant aspect of these improved health outcomes results from mothers being able to access early interventions and coordinated care, preventing postpartum complications that arise more than 60 days after delivery and keeping chronic conditions from worsening due to early identification and intervention.  

Last year, the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund (Health Fund) and 28 partners urged the Kansas Legislature to permanently extend postpartum coverage.   

“We commend Governor Kelly and the Kansas Legislature for extending postpartum KanCare coverage to 12 months,” said David Jordan, president and CEO of the Health Fund. “This will positively impact 9,000 Kansas mothers each year—reducing maternal mortality, improving health outcomes, and reducing disparities.” 

Extended postpartum KanCare is an important step toward improved health for mothers. We need to remain attentive to and advocate for mothers’ access to quality physical and mental health care in all Kansas communities. 

Related Materials 

Medicaid expansion would help all Kansans

The following is an opinion piece by Health Fund President David Jordan.

Eight years of inaction by policymakers have resulted in Kansans paying more for health care, our communities’ ability to deliver health care being pushed to the brink, and billions of dollars in lost economic opportunity.

Today, the Kansas legislature begins its annual legislative session, providing yet another opportunity to expand KanCare, Kansas’ Medicaid program. Kansas is one of only 12 states that has not expanded Medicaid, to the detriment of the 165,000 hardworking Kansans who fall in the coverage gap.

Who’s in the coverage gap?

A Kansas family of three with an annual income of $8,345 makes too much to be covered by KanCare, and too little to receive Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace subsidies. In this case, a single mother with two kids who works a minimum wage job 23 hours per week falls into the coverage gap – earning too much to qualify for KanCare and too little to qualify for health coverage through the ACA. 

According to the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, more than two-thirds of adults eligible for insurance through Medicaid expansion work or are in working families, and most are employed in industries less likely to offer affordable health insurance, such as service, construction, and retail.

At a time when all Kansans are experiencing the pinch of increased costs to provide for our families, health care is no exception. Expanding KanCare would not just benefit those in the coverage gap, it would also help bring down the costs of health care for Kansans and reduce costs for businesses.

As policymakers return to Topeka, it is important to remind them that expanding KanCare is a budget-neutral Kansas-specific policy that would help 165,000 hardworking Kansans who fall in the coverage gap access health care and reduce their risk of medical debt and bankruptcy.

Beyond improving health and economic security, expanding KanCare would add nearly 23,000 good-paying jobs to our state, increasing our economic output over the next three years by $17 billion and the personal income of Kansans by $6.3 billion. Expansion would also help protect access to care for our rural neighbors; 76 hospitals in Kansas are currently at risk of closing. Expanding KanCare would help rural Kansans access the care they need while boosting their local economies.

Join the conversation

To learn more about the state of KanCare and its potential expansion, you can attend a virtual lunch on January 13 with key leaders within the health sector to discuss the path forward for Medicaid expansion in Kansas.

Kansas Lt. Gov. David Toland, who also serves as the Kansas State Secretary of Commerce, will provide an update on the Governor’s plans around KanCare expansion and will share current data on the economic impact expansion will have in Kansas.

Sen. Doll, a Republican legislator from Garden City and longtime advocate of KanCare expansion, will discuss the path forward for expansion through the legislative process and how health leaders can help leverage their voices and positions to support this work.

Expanding KanCare is critically important to improving health, reducing costs for Kansas families, and creating jobs. To achieve this goal, we all need to engage in the discussion and let our policymakers know that we can’t afford to wait another year to expand KanCare.

Register for the lunch here.

© United Methodist Health Ministry Fund