Experiences with Work and Participation in Public Programs by Low-Income Medicaid Enrollees Using Qualitative Interviews

  • PDF / 297,976 Bytes
  • 7 Pages / 595.276 x 790.866 pts Page_size
  • 34 Downloads / 148 Views

DOWNLOAD

REPORT


University of Minnesota Medical School631 SE Oak St, Minneapolis, MN, USA; 2Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute 701 Park Ave., S9.104/S2.311, Minneapolis, MN, USA; 3University of Minnesota School of Public Health420 Delaware St. SE, MMC 729 Mayo, Minneapolis, MN, USA.

BACKGROUND: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) began encouraging governors to implement work requirements for Medicaid enrollees using section 1115 waivers in 2018. Significant controversy surrounds such attempts, but we know little about the perceptions and experiences of enrollees. OBJECTIVE: To characterize experiences of work and its relationship to participation in Medicaid and other public programs among potential targets of Medicaid work requirements. DESIGN: In-depth, semi-structured, one-time qualitative interviews. PARTICIPANTS: 35 very low-income, non-disabled Medicaid expansion enrollees participating in a countysponsored Medicaid managed care plan as a part of a larger study. APPROACH: We used a biographical narrative interpretive method during interviews including questions about the use of employment and income support and other public programs including from state and federal disability programs. Our team iteratively coded verbatim transcripts allowing for emergent themes. KEY RESULTS: Interview data revealed high motivation for, and broad participation in, formal and informal paid work. Eight themes emerged: (1) critical poverty (for example, “I’m not content, but what choices do I have?”); (2) behavioral and physical health barriers to work; (3) social barriers: unstable housing, low education, criminal justice involvement; (4) work, pride, and shame; (5) inflexible, unstable work (for example, “Can I have a job that will accommodate my doctor appointments?…Will my therapy have to suffer? You know? So it’s a double edged sword.”); (6) Medicaid supports the ability to work; (7) lack of transparency and misalignment of program eligibility (for example, “It’s not like I don’t want to work because I would like to work. It’s just that I don’t want to be homeless again, right?”); and (8) barriers, confusion, and contradictions about federal disability.

Prior Presentations This research was shared as an oral presentation at the Minnesota Academy of Family Physicians Research and Innovation Day on May 2, 2019, and as a poster at the AcademyHealth 2019 Annual Research Meeting on June 3, 2019. Received December 18, 2019 Revised April 4, 2020 Accepted May 8, 2020

CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that bipartisan solutions prioritizing the availability of well-paying jobs and planful transitions off of public programs would best serve very low-income, work-capable Medicaid enrollees. KEY WORDS: Medicaid; work; poverty/income; social determinants of health. J Gen Intern Med DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-05921-z © Society of General Internal Medicine 2020

INTRODUCTION

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) began encouraging governors to implement work requirements for Medicaid enrollees using section 1115 waivers in 2018.1 Since that