Legislature(2019 - 2020)ADAMS ROOM 519

02/18/2020 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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Audio Topic
01:36:10 PM Start
01:36:57 PM Presentation: Long-term Forecast of Mesa: Medicaid Enrollment and Spending in Alaska
03:14:19 PM Recessed to the Call of the Chair: the Meeting Reconvened on Wednesday, February 19, 2020 at 10:00 A.m.
03:14:19 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Recessed to 2/19/20 at 10:00 am --
+ MESA Long-Term Medicaid Spending in Alaska TELECONFERENCED
Forecast Report by Ted Helvoigt, Vice President,
Evergreen Economics
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     February 18, 2020                                                                                          
                         1:36 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:36:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                      
to order at 1:36 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Jennifer Johnston, Co-Chair                                                                                      
Representative Dan Ortiz, Vice-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Ben Carpenter                                                                                                    
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Gary Knopp                                                                                                       
Representative Bart LeBon                                                                                                       
Representative Kelly Merrick                                                                                                    
Representative Colleen Sullivan-Leonard                                                                                         
Representative Adam Wool                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Adam Crum, Commissioner, Department of Health and Social                                                                        
Services; Ted Helvoight Ph.D., Vice President, Evergreen                                                                        
Economics.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
PRESENT VIA TELECONFERENCE                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION:   LONG-TERM   FORECAST   OF   MESA:   MEDICAID                                                                    
ENROLLMENT AND SPENDING IN ALASKA                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster reviewed the meeting for the day.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION:   LONG-TERM   FORECAST  OF   MESA:   MEDICAID                                                                  
ENROLLMENT AND SPENDING IN ALASKA                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:36:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADAM  CRUM, COMMISSIONER,  DEPARTMENT OF  HEALTH AND  SOCIAL                                                                    
SERVICES,  introduced   Dr.  Helvoight.  He   indicated  the                                                                    
importance  of  the  subject of  Medicaid.  He  thought  the                                                                    
presentation  would be  very  informative. The  commissioner                                                                    
provided  some  background  information  on  Dr.  Helvoight.                                                                    
Evergreen  Economics  had  been   under  contract  with  the                                                                    
Department of  Health and Social Services  (DHSS) since 2011                                                                    
when  Dr. Helvoight  co-founded Evergreen  Economics. Prior,                                                                    
the   department  contracted   for   his  services   through                                                                    
ECONorthwest. He was responsible  for preparing the Medicaid                                                                    
Enrollment and Spending in Alaska  Report (MESA). The report                                                                    
was a  20-year forecast  updated annually and  was developed                                                                    
based on  more than 20  years of enrollment and  claim level                                                                    
data from DHSS.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  was the  lead author  of the  first long-term                                                                    
Alaska  Medicaid forecast  conducted by  the Lewin  Group in                                                                    
2005 and presented  to the legislature in  2006. Since then,                                                                    
the department had engaged him  to conduct annual updates of                                                                    
the long-term  Medicaid forecast  and to  develop short-term                                                                    
forecasts that  assisted DHSS with fiscal  year planning and                                                                    
budgeting.  He also  provided training  and  support to  the                                                                    
Medicaid budget group. He  conducted numerous other analyses                                                                    
for  the  department including  the  cost  of eight  chronic                                                                    
conditions  to the  Alaska Medicaid  Program, the  potential                                                                    
savings to  the program  from diabetes  self-management, the                                                                    
forecast of  enrollment and spending on  Medicaid expansion,                                                                    
the   trends  in   Alaska's  senior   population,  and   the                                                                    
enrollment  in   programs  and  spending  on   services  for                                                                    
Alaska's seniors.  He suggested that in  looking towards the                                                                    
future  at Alaska's  long-term budget  issues, the  topic of                                                                    
Medicaid  would need  to be  addressed together.  He thanked                                                                    
the committee.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:39:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TED  HELVOIGHT PH.D.,  VICE PRESIDENT,  EVERGREEN ECONOMICS,                                                                    
introduced the PowerPoint  Presentation: "Long-Term Forecast                                                                    
of  MESA: Medicaid  Enrollment and  Spending in  Alaska." He                                                                    
began with  slide 2 containing  an outline of what  he would                                                                    
be discussing in  the meeting. He explained  that his report                                                                    
was an  update of  his original study  produced in  2006. He                                                                    
invited members to ask questions during the presentation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight turned to slide  3 regarding the background of                                                                    
MESA.  The  forecast  assumed  that   Medicaid,  as  it  was                                                                    
presently,  would  exist  into  the  future.  In  the  early                                                                    
forecast he had  no idea there would be  the Affordable Care                                                                    
Act   (ACA)  Medicaid   expansion.   He   did  not   predict                                                                    
recessions, policy  changes, or  changes to  Federal Medical                                                                    
Assistance Percentages (FMAP) rates.  It assumed the program                                                                    
existed today.  The forecast would help  the legislature and                                                                    
department  leadership  to   understand  what  spending  and                                                                    
enrollment would  look like  20 years  from the  present day                                                                    
given the  programs currently in  place. He  asserted things                                                                    
would change that  Alaska could not control  such as actions                                                                    
of  the  federal  government  and  population  changes.  The                                                                    
department  could  control  certain  other  things  such  as                                                                    
services offered and  eligibility requirements. The forecast                                                                    
provided a  benchmark against  the future.  The idea  was to                                                                    
provide a  picture of what  Medicaid would look like  in the                                                                    
future.  It would  help the  legislature and  the department                                                                    
make  the  changes necessary  to  ensure  that the  spending                                                                    
projections did not come true in many cases.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  continued  that   the  forecast  focused  on                                                                    
population   demographics  and   rates  of   enrollment  for                                                                    
different groups such as men,  women, children, the elderly,                                                                    
the  working,  and  the  different  regions  of  the  state.                                                                    
Utilization  and  intensity  of Medicaid  services  and  the                                                                    
increase in prices of medical services were also a focus.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight reviewed  some key terms used  in his forecast                                                                    
on slide 4.  The slide was strictly for  reference. He might                                                                    
come back to it later.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  turned  to the  Mesa  Modeling  Approach  on                                                                    
slide 5. He  started with the state's  population determined                                                                    
by  the Department  of Labor  and Workforce  Development. He                                                                    
used the information pertaining to  the regions of focus and                                                                    
the   demographic   subcomponents.    He   also   considered                                                                    
enrollment for all  of the different groups  in the Medicaid                                                                    
Program. He then looked at  the utilization of services. The                                                                    
Medicaid Program  offered several different  services. Since                                                                    
the  original forecast  to the  present day,  segmenting the                                                                    
services  into 20  different categories,  he considered  the                                                                    
individual   service   categories   and   individual-touched                                                                    
services which had changed over  time. The earliest years of                                                                    
data he had were from 1997.  He reported that on average the                                                                    
typical Medicaid  enrollee utilized  fewer than  three (2.7)                                                                    
of the available services. Currently  the number of services                                                                    
was  about 3.5  to 3.6  services. Individuals  were touching                                                                    
more  services  presently.  In addition,  the  intensity  of                                                                    
Medicaid use had  grown over time. He spoke  of the elephant                                                                    
in the room,  price inflation. Price inflation  was added to                                                                    
create a spending forecast.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:44:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight moved  to slides  6 and  7 to  discuss recent                                                                    
historical trends.  He highlighted  that from FY  12 through                                                                    
FY  19 Medicaid  enrollment  had grown  by  51 percent.  The                                                                    
percent  change  in  the  number  of  recipients  had  grown                                                                    
slightly slower. The  difference between the two  was that a                                                                    
recipient  was a  Medicaid enrollee  that received  services                                                                    
and  a Medicaid  enrollee was  anyone enrolled  in Medicaid.                                                                    
Federal spending  grew very rapidly  and had  almost doubled                                                                    
over  the  period at  93  percent  while general  fund  (GF)                                                                    
spending  increased by  less than  6 percent  over the  same                                                                    
timeframe.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Sullivan-Leonard  asked if Dr.  Helvoight had                                                                    
the  data to  show why  the enrollment  had increased  by 51                                                                    
percent. She  wondered if the  recipients had  options other                                                                    
than Medicaid.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  responded that  the Senate  Finance Committee                                                                    
had a similar question.  More specifically, the question was                                                                    
about  how much  of  the increase  resulted from  expansion,                                                                    
changes in  the economy,  and the  effect of  the Affordable                                                                    
Care Act.  He could  determine who  was on  Medicaid through                                                                    
expansion but  could not establish  the reason.  However, he                                                                    
could  ascertain what  a person's  eligibility category  was                                                                    
when  they  applied  such  as  being  disabled,  because  of                                                                    
expansion,  or  for  other  reasons.   He  could  make  some                                                                    
estimations  about  how much  of  the  increase was  due  to                                                                    
expansion  because   some  individuals  were   not  eligible                                                                    
beforehand.  Other aspects  of  the ACA  such  as "No  wrong                                                                    
door" and  insurance mandates  might have  influenced people                                                                    
to  enroll in  Medicaid.  He  would not  know  why a  person                                                                    
enrolled in  Medicaid but could determine  their eligibility                                                                    
category.  He  could  also  make  some  estimates  based  on                                                                    
statistical  analysis   of  the  economic  impacts   of  the                                                                    
recession which influenced enrollment.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Sullivan-Leonard  thought  she  was  hearing                                                                    
that  because of  the failure  of the  ACA, recipients  that                                                                    
would normally  pursue private  health insurance  were being                                                                    
forced to enroll in Medicaid for their healthcare coverage.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  responded, "Not exactly." He  assumed that in                                                                    
many  cases individuals  did not  have  access to  insurance                                                                    
through a  private marketplace. He indicated  there were two                                                                    
types of  individuals that would  have joined  Medicaid when                                                                    
it   expanded:   Previously    uninsured   individuals   and                                                                    
individuals that  had private insurance who  dropped it when                                                                    
they  became   eligible  through  expansion.   However,  the                                                                    
information was not captured in the enrollment data.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:49:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Knopp  asked  the  speaker  to  go  back  to                                                                    
Medicaid 101.  He asked when Medicaid  expansion was adopted                                                                    
in Alaska. Dr. Helvoight confirmed that it was in 2016.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Knopp  asked  what the  expansion  did.  Dr.                                                                    
Helvoight  responded  that   Medicaid  expansion  went  into                                                                    
effect  September  1, 2015  (FY  16)  and expanded  Medicaid                                                                    
eligibility to adults who were  not disabled and who did not                                                                    
have dependents.  The three  criteria were  important. Prior                                                                    
to expansion a  person would have been eligible  as an adult                                                                    
with  dependent  children  or a  working-age  adult  with  a                                                                    
disability. Expansion  opened eligibility to  adults without                                                                    
dependents  and  working-age  adults without  a  disability.                                                                    
Expansion applied to adults from the ages of 19 to 64.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Knopp commented  that the  number of  people                                                                    
that enrolled  in Medicaid after expansion  was significant.                                                                    
He  wondered   about  Medicaid  eligibility   criteria.  Dr.                                                                    
Helvoight  responded   that  all  factors   were  considered                                                                    
including   income   levels.    Medicaid   was   essentially                                                                    
healthcare for the poor.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Knopp  asked if the  eligibility requirements                                                                    
changed  with expansion.  Dr. Helvoight  responded that  the                                                                    
traditional  eligibility requirements  had not  changed. The                                                                    
change was  the addition  of one  new eligibility  group. He                                                                    
remarked that,  independent of the expansion  portion of the                                                                    
ACA,  there   was  the  "No  wrong   door"  stipulation.  He                                                                    
explained that  when a  person came in  for a  service, even                                                                    
unrelated to Medicaid, they would  have a single application                                                                    
process. If they  were eligible for Medicaid,  they could be                                                                    
signed up.  He referred  to the insurance  mandate resulting                                                                    
from the  ACA. A  person might  not be  able to  get private                                                                    
insurance but  could get Medicaid.  He reported  an increase                                                                    
for children and other adults.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:53:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight continued  to slide 8: "Per-Enrollee/Recipient                                                                    
Spending  Is   Flat."  The  chart  showed   three  different                                                                    
categories  and spanned  between 2010-2019.  The green  line                                                                    
showed the  Per-enrollee growth in spending  on Medicaid. On                                                                    
a  per-enrollee  basis  spending  had been  very  flat  with                                                                    
Medicaid growing less than 1  percent per year. He indicated                                                                    
that for  recipients (enrollees  that were  using services),                                                                    
the  spending per  Medicaid recipient  had increased  by 1.5                                                                    
percent  per year.  The blue  line  represented everyone  in                                                                    
Alaska. On  a per-capita basis, healthcare  expenditures had                                                                    
increased  4.5 percent  annually. He  noted that  people who                                                                    
had  insurance through  their  employer  were familiar  with                                                                    
percentage jumps over the past  9 or 10 years. He summarized                                                                    
that the  Medicaid Program  overall had done  a good  job of                                                                    
controlling  spending growth.  Although  the enrollment  had                                                                    
increased,  the   per-individual  spending  had   not  grown                                                                    
substantially.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  moved  to  slide  9  highlighting  that  the                                                                    
healthcare's share  of economy has grown.  He explained that                                                                    
the  bars  represented  gross  domestic  product  (GDP)  for                                                                    
Alaska in  nominal terms  from 2010 to  2019. The  blue line                                                                    
represented healthcare expenditures as  a portion of the GDP                                                                    
   the  percentage  of  GDP   made  up  by  healthcare.  The                                                                    
recession in  Alaska started  late 2014  or early  2015. The                                                                    
bar showed  a steep decline  in GDP  for a couple  of years.                                                                    
The healthcare portion had increased  from 15 percent before                                                                    
2015 to nearly  20 percent presently. He  concluded that the                                                                    
economy  got smaller  but healthcare  did not.  In addition,                                                                    
Medicaid  expansion  had  driven up  demand  for  healthcare                                                                    
services.  Currently,  the   healthcare  percentage  of  the                                                                    
economy in Alaska was nearly  20 percent which was about the                                                                    
same as the United States overall.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight emphasized  that healthcare  costs had  risen                                                                    
quickly as  denoted on slide  10. He indicated the  red line                                                                    
represented medical price inflation  for the Anchorage area.                                                                    
The orange  dashed line represented medical  price inflation                                                                    
for the U.S. overall. He went  back to 1984 to show that the                                                                    
red  and orange  dashed lines  were on  the same  projection                                                                    
until late 2009 when  they started to diverge substantially.                                                                    
It meant  that medical  prices in  Alaska were  growing much                                                                    
faster than the U.S overall.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  continued to explained the  chart. He pointed                                                                    
to the  dark blue line and  the dashed light blue  line. The                                                                    
dark  blue line  represented Alaska's  consumer price  index                                                                    
(CPI), while  the dashed light  blue line showed  the entire                                                                    
U.S. During  the same period  of time. The growth  in prices                                                                    
for  all  products and  services  consumed  by Alaskans  had                                                                    
grown  slightly slower  than the  U.S. overall.  He included                                                                    
the blue  lines to show  that the steep increase  in medical                                                                    
prices  in  Alaska relative  to  the  U.S. overall  was  not                                                                    
explained  by a  higher  growth rate  in  the CPI.  Instead,                                                                    
there  were other  factors at  work driving  up prices  that                                                                    
were  already higher  than  anywhere else  in  the U.S.  The                                                                    
chart showed  that the rate  of change in  healthcare prices                                                                    
was growing faster.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:58:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Sullivan-Leonard  asked   about  healthcare                                                                    
price inflation.  She mentioned  in previous  committee work                                                                    
there  had been  constructive  conversations with  different                                                                    
hospital providers  and physicians about how  to lower costs                                                                    
in the  healthcare industry in  Alaska. She noted  that part                                                                    
of the reason for the high  costs had to do with competition                                                                    
among providers  and healthcare  facilities. She  provided a                                                                    
hypothetical  scenario. She  thought providers  were setting                                                                    
rates as  they pleased.  In such circumstances  she wondered                                                                    
how to bring costs down.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight agreed  with Representative  Sullivan-Leonard                                                                    
that providers  had significant market  power in  Alaska. He                                                                    
looked at the U.S.  and Alaska price inflation periodically.                                                                    
He admitted  it had been a  few years since he  had reviewed                                                                    
it  because they  typically  tracked the  same.  He had  not                                                                    
expected to see  such a deviation. Initially,  he thought it                                                                    
was a  small data series. However,  it was not the  case, as                                                                    
it  was  too  consistent  of  a  series  divergence.  As  an                                                                    
economist  he quickly  assumed that  it was  an instance  in                                                                    
which there  was a small  market, spatially isolated,  and a                                                                    
market place  that had  consolidated significantly  over the                                                                    
previous  decade. He  mentioned talking  to an  economist at                                                                    
Oregon  Health and  Sciences  University.  They agreed  that                                                                    
doctors  in Alaska  were  price-setting.  He also  mentioned                                                                    
that  the  lower  48  had a  much  better  insurance  market                                                                    
because of there  being more providers. At a  high level, it                                                                    
appeared  price-setting  was  occurring. He  suggested  that                                                                    
other states  had similar problems. Publishing  prices might                                                                    
help open  up scrutiny. He  noted that managed care  was not                                                                    
permitted in Alaska  and was uncertain it would  work in the                                                                    
state. He indicated he was  not looking at a Medicaid issue,                                                                    
rather,  it was  an  Alaska healthcare  issue. He  clarified                                                                    
that  the chart  showed private  healthcare spending  rather                                                                    
than Medicaid.  He asserted  that Medicaid  prices, although                                                                    
they would  be lower, tracked along  with private healthcare                                                                    
prices.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:04:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight moved  to the  topic  of the  FY 20  - FY  24                                                                    
projection on slide  11. He directed attention  to the chart                                                                    
on slide 12  which showed population for  the past, present,                                                                    
and future.  He reported that population  had increased very                                                                    
rapidly  years ago.  However, it  had  slowed down  becoming                                                                    
negative.  He predicted  it would  slowly increase  again at                                                                    
about .5 percent per year through the following 20 years.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight reviewed  the fact  that Alaska's  population                                                                    
was  aging on  slide  13. He  indicated  the population  had                                                                    
changed and was  growing older. He reported  the growth rate                                                                    
for people  65 and  older would grow  more than  1.5 percent                                                                    
per year.  The traditional working age  adult population was                                                                    
growing much  slower, and the  child population  was growing                                                                    
at an even  slower rate. He thought the growth  of the aging                                                                    
population  in Alaska  was higher  than in  the rest  of the                                                                    
U.S.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  moved to slide  14 to highlight that  the ACA                                                                    
was  no longer  impacting enrollment  growth. He  pointed to                                                                    
the age cohort between FY 15  through FY 20 (the fiscal year                                                                    
before Medicaid  expansion to the  current year).  There was                                                                    
an overall growth rate in  enrollment of 9 percent per year.                                                                    
Going forward the rate would  be much slower   slightly more                                                                    
than 1  percent per year.  He noted that  currently Medicaid                                                                    
covered many  more adults than  it did children. It  was not                                                                    
the case when he started in  his position 15 years prior. He                                                                    
reported that in  FY 00 the median age of  enrollees was 14.                                                                    
In other  words, half  of Medicaid  enrollees were  14 years                                                                    
old  and  younger and  half  were  over 14.  Presently,  the                                                                    
median age was 23. He thought  the median age would creep up                                                                    
to 25 by FY 40.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  turned to slide  15 showing the long  view of                                                                    
Medicaid enrollment. The slide  reflected from FY 97 through                                                                    
FY  40. The  black line  represented FY  19. Enrollment  had                                                                    
been  increasing  through  the period.  He  highlighted  the                                                                    
rapid  growth  of  the working  adult  population  over  the                                                                    
previous  5  years largely  due  to  Medicaid expansion.  He                                                                    
surmised that growth would slow  but would continue over the                                                                    
following 20 years.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight moved  to slide 16 and  reported that spending                                                                    
was expected to slow but  would keep growing. He pointed out                                                                    
that everything  to the right  of the black line  got larger                                                                    
which  reflected  the  power  of  compounding  interest  and                                                                    
growth rates. In  2000, the Medicaid Program  was well below                                                                    
$1 billion.  Currently, the program  was at $2  billion. The                                                                    
program  would push  above  $5.5 billion  in  20 years.  His                                                                    
analysis  was based  on population,  demographics, potential                                                                    
enrollment, and medical price inflation.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:08:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Sullivan-Leonard   asked   if   the   aging                                                                    
population  numbers were  affected  by  Medicare dollars  or                                                                    
whether  he was  only highlighting  Medicaid. Dr,  Helvoight                                                                    
responded, "Yes."                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative    Sullivan-Leonard    asked   about    those                                                                    
recipients  on Medicare,  ages 65  and older,  and why  they                                                                    
were  also on  Medicaid. Dr.  Helvoight responded  that many                                                                    
individuals,  ages  65 and  older,  were  dual eligible  for                                                                    
Medicaid  and  Medicare.   Often,  individuals  enrolled  in                                                                    
Medicare  had  their  premiums  paid  for  by  the  Medicaid                                                                    
Program.  Medicare   would  then  be  the   first  payer  on                                                                    
services. The slide only showed Medicaid dollars.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool asked  about the graph on  slide 16 that                                                                    
increased to  $5 billion in  20 years. He wondered  how much                                                                    
of  the  increase had  to  do  with price  increases  versus                                                                    
population   growth.  Dr.   Helvoight   would  address   the                                                                    
representative's question in 3 slides.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool  brought up the median  age rising since                                                                    
Medicaid expansion.  He wondered if Dr.  Helvoight took into                                                                    
account those individuals  eligible at age 21  who might not                                                                    
need  Medicaid  in  their thirties.  Dr.  Helvoight  thought                                                                    
Representative Wool  brought up  an important point.  He was                                                                    
not   assuming  enrollment   was   simply  cumulative.   The                                                                    
enrollment portion  of the  forecast was based  on a  set of                                                                    
statistical  models examining  240 subgroups.  The subgroups                                                                    
were based on 12 age  cohorts, gender, Alaska Native Status,                                                                    
and 5  regions. The  models considered the  probability that                                                                    
an individual  would enroll in Medicaid  based on historical                                                                    
data and trends.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Merrick  asked about  younger people  and the                                                                    
Denali Kid Care  Program. She asked if it was  a part of the                                                                    
Medicaid Program.  Dr. Helvoight  confirmed that  the Denali                                                                    
Kid  Care Program  was a  part of  the Medicaid  Program. He                                                                    
reported that  Medicaid was  very complicated.  He indicated                                                                    
that  all  kids on  Medicaid  or  in the  Children's  Health                                                                    
Insurance  Program  (CHIP)  were  included.  They  would  be                                                                    
enrolled through different eligibility categories.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:13:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight discussed the  notion that healthcare spending                                                                    
increased  with  age  on  slide 17.  The  slide  showed  the                                                                    
average Medicaid  spending per  enrollee. He  suggested that                                                                    
it  was no  surprise more  money was  spent on  seniors than                                                                    
working age  adults and children.  The trend  would continue                                                                    
into the future.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  reviewed slide 18  having to do  with federal                                                                    
spending versus  GF spending. He reported  that the forecast                                                                    
for FY 20  estimated just under $670 million  in GF spending                                                                    
versus almost  $1.6 billion in federal  spending. Both types                                                                    
of  spending  would grow  at  the  rate  through FY  40.  He                                                                    
mentioned that  the long-term forecast  was based  on claims                                                                    
from the  date of service  rather than the date  of payment.                                                                    
Typically  for budgeting  purposes the  date of  payment was                                                                    
more important.  However, over the long-term,  they would be                                                                    
the  same.  He added  that  he  assumed  there would  be  no                                                                    
changes in federal medical assistance percentages (FMAPS).                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnston  asked that with Medicaid  Expansion there                                                                    
was a  step-down of the federal  reimbursement. However, the                                                                    
growth in federal spending was  close to the growth in state                                                                    
spending.  She  asked if  she  was  accurate. Dr.  Helvoight                                                                    
answered  affirmatively. He  explained that  the first  half                                                                    
was  with  the  FMAP  for the  expansion  population  of  93                                                                    
percent. The  second half was  at 90 percent. Even  with the                                                                    
step-down of expansion the state  ended up at about the same                                                                    
growth rate.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Merrick asked  how the  FMAP was  calculated                                                                    
and  how  Alaska compared  to  other  states. Dr.  Helvoight                                                                    
responded that there were  several calculations involved. He                                                                    
argued that the  FMAP was very slow. He  reported Alaska was                                                                    
at the  lowest FMAP, 50 percent.  Representative Merrick was                                                                    
interested in seeing the comparison of other states.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:18:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  turned  to  slide   19  to  answer  Co-Chair                                                                    
Johnston's  question  about  items  contributing  to  growth                                                                    
rates. He pointed to the  blue horizontal band at the bottom                                                                    
representing present  day spending. It assumed  the Medicaid                                                                    
population would  stay the same without  enrollees aging for                                                                    
the following 20  years   an unrealistic  scenario. The very                                                                    
light  sand colored  band  showed  population growth.  There                                                                    
would be  slow population  growth which  would lead  to more                                                                    
enrollment in Medicaid.  Next, he pointed to  the green band                                                                    
which showed  enrollment growth above population  growth. He                                                                    
expected  that the  proportion  of  the population  enrolled                                                                    
would increase slightly over time.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  continued  to the  utilization  of  Medicaid                                                                    
services  represented in  dark brown.  He reemphasized  that                                                                    
all the  services offered  through Medicaid  were aggregated                                                                    
into 20 different service  categories. Over time individuals                                                                    
enrolled  in  Medicaid  were using  more  of  the  different                                                                    
services.  He  provided  an   example.  The  utilization  of                                                                    
Medicaid services had grown  historically and would continue                                                                    
to grow.  The light blue  band represented the  intensity of                                                                    
services. In the past, individuals  with knee pain would get                                                                    
an x-ray, in following years  they would get an MRI instead.                                                                    
Intensity of services could be  due to technology or changes                                                                    
in the  care provided which  occurred over time.  The change                                                                    
was not  significant. He pointed  to the mauve  band showing                                                                    
healthcare price inflation which would  drive cost up in the                                                                    
future. Medical  price inflation was high  everywhere in the                                                                    
U.S.  and  particularly  high  in  Alaska.  Prices  paid  to                                                                    
providers were contracted. However,  the providers wanted to                                                                    
contract for higher prices all  of the time. They wanted the                                                                    
increases to  be comparable to  what they were  receiving in                                                                    
the  private  marketplace. Although  he  did  not think  the                                                                    
prices  could  get  much higher  in  Alaska,  medical  price                                                                    
inflation  would  remain  the  largest cost  driver  in  the                                                                    
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:22:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter thought  there was  an economy  of                                                                    
scale  problem.  He suggested  that  there  were not  enough                                                                    
patients for  the number  of doctors  in Alaska  to continue                                                                    
increasing doctors  and healthcare facilities adding  to the                                                                    
state's bottom line.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight did  not  agree. He  argued  that Alaska  had                                                                    
always  had  a  small  population. Other  states  had  small                                                                    
populations  without  having  the  increases  in  healthcare                                                                    
prices  as  great as  those  seen  in Alaska.  Additionally,                                                                    
there was  a small  population purchasing energy,  food, and                                                                    
other goods  and services, yet  the overall CPI  was growing                                                                    
slightly  slower in  Alaska than  the  rest of  the U.S.  He                                                                    
observed one  sector of the economy,  the healthcare sector,                                                                    
that had a significant amount  of power because people could                                                                    
not shop  around. At  best it was  an opaque  market. Prices                                                                    
were not  posted in the  emergency room and a  patient would                                                                    
not  know whether  an anesthesiologist  was in  network, for                                                                    
example.  He asserted  that scale  issues  were not  driving                                                                    
growth  in  prices.  Rather,  they  were  impacting  what  a                                                                    
patient  was paying  relative to  the rest  of the  U.S. but                                                                    
were not  driving prices up  faster. He  indicated something                                                                    
else was going on. He  assumed the market power of providers                                                                    
was the source of impact.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:25:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter  asked if Dr. Helvoight  had broken                                                                    
down  price  inflation  to  show   how  competition  in  the                                                                    
lower 48  between  states  or  metropolitan  areas  impacted                                                                    
prices  compared   to  Alaska.  He  reiterated   the  severe                                                                    
increase  in healthcare  price inflation  in Alaska  and the                                                                    
lack  of  competition.  He asked  how  Dr.  Helvoight  would                                                                    
delineate  how  much  of  the price  inflation  was  due  to                                                                    
Alaska's  remoteness and  lack of  provider competition.  He                                                                    
suggested that  because of  Alaska's small  population there                                                                    
would never be sufficient  competition to drive prices down.                                                                    
Additional people  would not fly  to Alaska  for healthcare.                                                                    
The opposite occurred  where Alaskans flew out  of state for                                                                    
medical  care.  Alaska's  competition  existed  outside  the                                                                    
state but was a small number.  If the number was larger, the                                                                    
competition would be greater.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight replied that instead  of using a projection of                                                                    
medical price  inflation for Alaska,  it would be  better to                                                                    
take a medical price inflation  forecast for the U.S overall                                                                    
and compare it to Alaska.  The difference would equate to an                                                                    
Alaska premium.  He spoke to  the notion of  Alaskans flying                                                                    
out of state for medical care.  He thought it was a reaction                                                                    
to the price setting behavior  of providers in the state. He                                                                    
noted  price  inflation  had  not   always  been  a  factor.                                                                    
Previously,  medical price  inflation in  the U.S.  had been                                                                    
similar to Alaska. The delineation  occurred in 2009 or 2010                                                                    
and had continued to grow.  He suggested looking service-by-                                                                    
service comparing several other  places around the state. He                                                                    
acknowledged  that, because  it was  Alaska, there  could be                                                                    
reasons why  care would  be more  expensive. He  argued that                                                                    
even if  costs were 10  times higher in Alaska  than Seattle                                                                    
or  San Francisco,  Alaska  was a  less  expensive place  to                                                                    
live.  He was  aware of  limits  to the  expectation for  an                                                                    
Alaska premium.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Carpenter  agreed   that  there  were  other                                                                    
places  that  were  more  expensive.  However,  those  other                                                                    
places had  larger populations. He  argued that  the economy                                                                    
of  scale problem  was that  healthcare was  more expensive,                                                                    
but there were more people needing healthcare.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight countered  that it  would impact  the current                                                                    
cost.  However, he  did  not think  it  would influence  the                                                                    
change in  cost over time.  He indicated that it  should not                                                                    
drive costs to  grow faster. It might result  in costs being                                                                    
higher, but  the change over  time should not  be different.                                                                    
The  difference in  CPI was  not that  costs were  higher in                                                                    
Alaska  than the  lower 48.  It  showed that  the growth  in                                                                    
costs  was   higher  in  Alaska   than  the  lower   48.  He                                                                    
reemphasized that the overall CPI  costs had grown slower in                                                                    
Alaska  with  a smaller  population.  He  suggested that  in                                                                    
other  sectors  of  the  economy  they  were  servicing  the                                                                    
smaller  population without  experiencing the  same rate  in                                                                    
price growth.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter asked if  Dr. Helvoight had a graph                                                                    
showing when  the increase in  federal dollars  was funneled                                                                    
into  the healthcare  industry and  any  related trends.  He                                                                    
mentioned  services  growing.  Dr.  Helvoight  replied  that                                                                    
services growing  also occurred in  the rest of the  U.S. He                                                                    
noted that  federal dollars flowed into  healthcare in every                                                                    
state.  Every state  had a  Medicaid Program  and individual                                                                    
Medicare. He  continued that  expansion occurred  in certain                                                                    
states well before it did  in Alaska. Montana expanded about                                                                    
the same time  as Alaska. He noted that  the federal dollars                                                                    
were not  included in  the CPI  (private dollars  only). The                                                                    
increase  in provider  rates would  be increased  by medical                                                                    
price inflation.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:31:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Carpenter  asked   if  Dr.   Helvoight  was                                                                    
suggesting  that Alaska  had a  higher percentage  of greedy                                                                    
people    some  sort of  healthcare greed  in the  state. In                                                                    
other words,  providers jacked up their  prices because they                                                                    
could. Dr. Helvoight, as an  economist, saw market power. He                                                                    
did not look at the  difference in prices, rather, he looked                                                                    
at  the change  in  prices.  In a  place  like Anchorage,  a                                                                    
relatively small  spatially isolated metro area  compared to                                                                    
many other  places throughout the  U.S., he saw  what looked                                                                    
like  providers setting  prices.  He  continued that  Alaska                                                                    
might  not have  a  strong insurance  network  to push  back                                                                    
against  them.  He  concluded   that  the  healthcare  price                                                                    
inflation was  driving a large  portion of costs  in Alaska.                                                                    
He  thought  it was  an  issue  beyond  Medicaid; it  was  a                                                                    
statewide   issue.  He   indicated  that   10  years   prior                                                                    
healthcare was  14 percent  of Alaska's  economy. Presently,                                                                    
it was  20 percent.  Part of the  reason for  the percentage                                                                    
increase  was  that  other parts  of  Alaska's  economy  had                                                                    
shrank including oil. There were other issues as well.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:35:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Johnston  recommended looking  at reports  from the                                                                    
Institute of  Social and Economic Research  (ISER) regarding                                                                    
out-of-network  costs  in  Alaska. She  realized  the  chart                                                                    
reflected  a  point  in  time.  She  mentioned  the  state's                                                                    
medical costs and retirement costs  for its employees having                                                                    
dropped.  She   asked  if  Dr.   Helvoight  had   built  the                                                                    
information  into the  model.  Dr.  Helvoight responded,  "I                                                                    
have  not." He  clarified that  she was  asking about  state                                                                    
employees.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston  responded  that she  was  talking  about                                                                    
state employees  and the  state's retirement  community. She                                                                    
noted the  unfunded liability of  state pension  funds which                                                                    
was very  large because  of medical costs.  However, medical                                                                    
costs had  dropped significantly. She remarked  there were a                                                                    
couple of  other public insurance programs  in which medical                                                                    
costs had also dropped.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool asked  if Dr.  Helvoight had  evaluated                                                                    
the eightieth  percentile rule in Alaska.  He encouraged him                                                                    
to  explain it.  Dr.  Helvoight responded  that  it was  not                                                                    
included in the forecast.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool noted  Dr. Helvoight  had talked  about                                                                    
Alaska  prices, market  power,  and  the reimbursement  rate                                                                    
which  did not  apply  to  Medicaid directly  as  it did  to                                                                    
private insurers. Dr. Helvoight  had inferred a parallel. He                                                                    
wondered  if  he  had  analyzed  the  information.  Co-Chair                                                                    
Johnston referred Representative Wool to the ISER study.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Josephson   thought   there  would   be   a                                                                    
connection  if the  private sector  healthcare provider  had                                                                    
exorbitant  rate. The  legislature might  feel compelled  to                                                                    
offer rate adjustments and  inflation adjustments because of                                                                    
a  concern  of  diminishing  the interest  in  the  Medicaid                                                                    
provision. He thought there was some connection.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight responded,  "Absolutely." He  elaborated that                                                                    
while  Medicaid rates  were  negotiated  and sometimes  went                                                                    
down, most  of the time they  went up. The rate  of increase                                                                    
was tied to medical price inflation  which was why it was an                                                                    
integral part  of the forecast.  If medical  price inflation                                                                    
was significantly  low, Medicaid  prices would  not increase                                                                    
rapidly.  His assumption  was  that  Medicaid pricing  would                                                                    
roughly parallel with increases of all healthcare prices.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:39:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon referred to the  chart and asked if the                                                                    
relationship between state-paid  Medicaid and federally-paid                                                                    
Medicaid assumed no change over  time. In a growth scenario,                                                                    
he wondered  if the  state portion  and the  federal portion                                                                    
would  remain the  same. He  asked if  the relationship  was                                                                    
neutral.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight responded  that the only change  would be with                                                                    
respect to  the individuals  being enrolled in  Medicaid. He                                                                    
reported that  the 65  and over  population in  Medicaid was                                                                    
growing  faster  than  the  working  population.  Therefore,                                                                    
people  who were  65  and older  would have  an  FMAP of  50                                                                    
percent. No one  65 and older would be part  of the Medicaid                                                                    
expansion population.  The state would receive  a 50 percent                                                                    
FMAP for  them rather than  a 90 percent FMAP.  The forecast                                                                    
accounted for  the adjustments in  rates associated  with an                                                                    
individual's  age and  the likelihood  of their  eligibility                                                                    
category.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon  asked if  he could expect  the state's                                                                    
share  to  grow with  the  aging  population. Dr.  Helvoight                                                                    
replied,  "Yes, for  sure, all  else being  equal. Yes."  He                                                                    
expounded that at  the same time there had  been rebasing. A                                                                    
few  years  prior,  many   Alaska  Native  beneficiaries  of                                                                    
Medicaid received  a 100 match  from the  federal government                                                                    
for  65 percent  of the  services they  received. Currently,                                                                    
the  percentage of  services receiving  a 100  percent match                                                                    
was  10   to  14  percent   higher.  The  state   was  still                                                                    
benefiting.  The forecast  acknowledged the  benefit of  the                                                                    
shift in federal spending.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative LeBon recalled the debate  in 2015 to take on                                                                    
the  expansion. He  had heard  that  the federal  government                                                                    
would pick up the majority  of expanded costs for a benefit.                                                                    
He asked  if the  state could  expect the  relationship with                                                                    
the federal  government to remain consistent.  Dr. Helvoight                                                                    
responded that  the question was  beyond his pay  grade. The                                                                    
forecast assumed no change in the structure.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:42:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  mentioned  that at  the  time  of                                                                    
deliberations, Becky  Hultberg of the Alaska  State Hospital                                                                    
and Nursing  Home Association gave  a presentation  making a                                                                    
strong  case  that  the  state  would  come  out  ahead.  He                                                                    
wondered   if   Dr.   Helvoight  had   seen   the   numbers.                                                                    
Dr. Helvoight imagined  that Ms.  Hultberg's point  was that                                                                    
the  state  was  getting  people covered,  and  the  federal                                                                    
government was paying $.90 on  $1.00. It meant many hundreds                                                                    
of thousands  of dollars  would be  coming into  the economy                                                                    
every year. He  concurred with the economic  view that there                                                                    
were  certainly benefits  to Alaska.  He was  agnostic about                                                                    
expansion but thought there was a logical argument for it.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight moved  to slide 20: "Bending  the Cost Curve."                                                                    
He  explained  that  for each  slide,  the  red  represented                                                                    
actual spending. The blue dots  showed what was predicted in                                                                    
the  2006  forecast,  and the  green  dots  represented  the                                                                    
current  forecast. In  the 2006  forecast  presented to  the                                                                    
legislature  he  predicted  that there  would  be  extremely                                                                    
rapid  growth in  Medicaid spending  over  the following  20                                                                    
years given  the construct  of the program  at the  time and                                                                    
how spending  was moving.  He reported  that the  red showed                                                                    
what   happened  since   2006.  The   legislature  and   the                                                                    
department  made some  immediate  changes  in personal  care                                                                    
attendant services  and other parts of  the Medicaid Program                                                                    
and flattened spending  growth for a few years.  In 2015 and                                                                    
2016  the Affordable  Care Act  and Medicaid  expansion came                                                                    
into  play.  He pointed  to  the  red line  which  indicated                                                                    
bending the  cost curve  from where  the expectation  of the                                                                    
prices  would  go.  The  green  line  showed  what  actually                                                                    
happened. He was looking at total spending.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:46:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight   spoke  of  many  more   Alaskans  receiving                                                                    
Medicaid  services  on  slide   21.  The  number  of  people                                                                    
receiving  services   through  Medicaid  was   much  greater                                                                    
presently than he  predicted in 2005 because of  the ACA. He                                                                    
highlighted  that the  actual number  of recipients  tracked                                                                    
very closely with the forecast  until Medicaid expansion, at                                                                    
which  time it  grew  substantially.  Currently, there  were                                                                    
many  more  people  receiving   Medicaid  services  than  he                                                                    
predicted due to expansion.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  turned to  the last graph  on slide  22 which                                                                    
showed spending was much lower  than expected. Although many                                                                    
more  people  were   receiving  services  than  anticipated,                                                                    
spending  per recipient  was much  lower than  he originally                                                                    
forecasted.  The red  line  showed  what actually  happened.                                                                    
Immediately  following  the   first  forecast  spending  per                                                                    
recipient  decreased for  a  couple of  years  and had  been                                                                    
relatively flat until 2020. He  expected it to increase over                                                                    
time. He  observed that the  legislature and  the department                                                                    
had accomplished slowing the growth  of the Medicaid Program                                                                    
even while the program had grown substantially.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool noted Dr.  Helvoight had predicted fewer                                                                    
people  covered at  a  much higher  cost,  yet the  opposite                                                                    
occurred. More people were being  served at a lower cost. He                                                                    
wondered why Dr. Helvoight's predictions were off.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight responded  that the forecast of  the number of                                                                    
people  covered  did not  anticipate  any  expansion in  the                                                                    
future.  The  forecast  was  in   line  with  what  actually                                                                    
occurred  until expansion.  Regarding  spending, the  impact                                                                    
was a result  of a combination of  the population projection                                                                    
at the time and a  greater growth in the elderly population.                                                                    
The aging population had grown but  not at the rate that was                                                                    
expected. Additionally,  he thought  the seniors  that would                                                                    
be staying  in the state or  coming into the state  would be                                                                    
similar  to seniors  in the  past. However,  seniors of  the                                                                    
current  day were  wealthier making  them less  eligible for                                                                    
Medicaid. He  argued that while  seniors contributed  to the                                                                    
growing  number of  people enrolled  in  the program,  their                                                                    
rate of growth in Medicaid  was slower than their population                                                                    
growth. The  spending growth had  been impacted  because not                                                                    
as  many seniors  received expensive  services  like he  had                                                                    
anticipated.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  continued that  the  largest  factor in  his                                                                    
predictions being  off had  to do  with deeper  oversight of                                                                    
such  services  as  providing personal  care  attendants,  a                                                                    
service growing  at a rate of  15 percent to 25  percent per                                                                    
year. Currently, services  were only growing at a  rate of 2                                                                    
percent to  3 percent per year    similar to other  parts of                                                                    
the  Medicaid  Program.  There  were  several  changes  that                                                                    
occurred with the department.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:51:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Merrick  asked if Medicaid recipients  paid a                                                                    
copay   or   deductible.    Dr.   Helvoight   replied,   "My                                                                    
understanding is, not in Alaska."                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:51:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight moved  to the topic of  chronic conditions and                                                                    
Medicaid  on   slide  23.  He  reported   that  the  overall                                                                    
structure  of the  long-term  forecast  had been  consistent                                                                    
each year  with a few changes  that made it better.  The one                                                                    
thing he  added in  the current year  and would  continue to                                                                    
include in  the future was to  look at the issue  of chronic                                                                    
conditions.  The  department   considered  cost  drivers  in                                                                    
Medicaid more frequently.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  reviewed the  bar  chart  on slide  24  that                                                                    
showed the FY  18 chronic conditions and  age of recipients.                                                                    
He  indicated  there  was  much more  in  the  report  about                                                                    
chronic conditions  including all of the  chronic conditions                                                                    
he looked at  within the Medicaid population.  He found that                                                                    
most  people  on Medicaid  did  not  have diagnosed  chronic                                                                    
conditions. He  noted the  different age  groupings included                                                                    
on  the  chart.  The  blue  portion  of  the  bar  reflected                                                                    
recipients  without  a   diagnosed  chronic  condition.  The                                                                    
orange  bar showed  recipients with  chronic conditions.  He                                                                    
reminded members  that the  chart only  reflected recipients                                                                    
(people who received Medicaid services  in 2018) rather than                                                                    
enrollees.  He  reported  there  were  approximately  40,000                                                                    
other  individuals  enrolled  in Medicaid  who  received  no                                                                    
services in the same period.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight  turned to slide  25 to discuss the  impact of                                                                    
age  on   chronic  conditions.  Over  time   with  age,  the                                                                    
proportion  of   individuals  on  Medicaid   with  diagnosed                                                                    
chronic  conditions increased  and  was  greater than  those                                                                    
without  chronic  conditions.   He  concluded  that  chronic                                                                    
conditions were  closely related  to age. The  graph showed,                                                                    
by age,  the prevalence  of diagnosed chronic  conditions in                                                                    
the Medicaid population increasing over time.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight turned to slide  26: "Chronic Conditions Drive                                                                    
Spending, FY2008."  He explained  the columns on  the slide.                                                                    
Column  A  reflected  the twelve  different  age  groups  he                                                                    
focused on in doing the  long-term forecast. Column B showed                                                                    
the  average  spending  in  FY  18  for  recipients  of  the                                                                    
corresponding age  group. He  highlighted that  spending per                                                                    
recipient increased  with age.  Column C showed  the average                                                                    
spending  per  recipient  for   recipients  with  a  chronic                                                                    
condition.  Aside  from  the youngest  and  the  oldest  age                                                                    
groups there was not a  notable difference in spending based                                                                    
on age.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Dr.   Helvoight  shifted   attention  to   Column  D   which                                                                    
represented   the  average   spending   per  recipient   for                                                                    
individuals with  a chronic condition. Again,  there was not                                                                    
much of a difference in spending  except for the 85 years or                                                                    
older, even though Column B  showed that as individuals aged                                                                    
spending   per   recipient   increased   substantially.   He                                                                    
concluded   that  the   prevalence  of   chronic  conditions                                                                    
increased with age which explained  why age had an effect on                                                                    
spending. Column  E showed the incremental  costs of chronic                                                                    
conditions  which  was  calculated  by  taking  the  average                                                                    
spending for  a person  with a  chronic condition  minus the                                                                    
average  spending   for  a   recipient  without   a  chronic                                                                    
condition. The  question came  down to  how much  a Medicaid                                                                    
recipient with a  chronic condition cost. On  average it was                                                                    
about  $21,000 more  per  year in  FY 18  for  those with  a                                                                    
chronic condition.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:56:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative    Carpenter   asked    if   there    was   a                                                                    
stratification  in  costs  based  on  age.  He  provided  an                                                                    
example.  Dr. Helvoight  did not  believe so  but could  not                                                                    
answer definitively.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight  advanced to  the  chart  on slide  27  which                                                                    
displayed  the incremental  cost  of  chronic conditions  in                                                                    
FY 18. He  reported that Column A  was the same as  Column A                                                                    
in the previous table. Column B  was the same as Column E in                                                                    
the previous  table. The age categories  and the incremental                                                                    
costs  for  recipients with  a  chronic  condition were  the                                                                    
same.  Column   F  represented  the  number   of  recipients                                                                    
diagnosed  with a  chronic condition  in FY  18 with  one or                                                                    
more  diagnosed chronic  conditions.  Column  G equaled  the                                                                    
total incremental  cost to  the Medicaid  Program associated                                                                    
with chronic conditions.  The total spending in  FY 18 based                                                                    
on  the date  of service  was about  $2.2 billion,  of which                                                                    
$1.3 billion had  to do  with the  additional costs  paid to                                                                    
treat  recipients with  chronic conditions.  The amount  was                                                                    
well over  the total spending  of $2.2 billion. The  cost of                                                                    
chronic conditions  was a large  issue in healthcare  in the                                                                    
U.S. and the Medicaid Program  in Alaska. He also thought it                                                                    
was a growing issue with Alaska's aging population.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Dr. Helvoight continued to his  final slide, slide 28: "Cost                                                                    
Impact of  Chronic Conditions Will  Grow." He  reported that                                                                    
presently  about  73 percent  of  Medicaid  spending was  on                                                                    
beneficiaries   diagnosed   with   one   or   more   chronic                                                                    
conditions. He noted that providers  were supposed to report                                                                    
a  diagnosis code  for the  Medicaid Management  Information                                                                    
System  (MMIS) to  use  for  payment. It  was  also used  to                                                                    
determine whether a condition  was chronic. Some claims were                                                                    
not  required  to have  diagnostic  codes  such as  pharmacy                                                                    
claims. Some other claims simply  did not have a code. Based                                                                    
on the Medicaid population over  the following 20 years, the                                                                    
amount of  Medicaid spending  on beneficiaries  with chronic                                                                    
conditions  would rise  to about  78 percent  by FY  40. The                                                                    
information was based on what  he saw in the database. About                                                                    
$4 of  every $5 would  be spent on individuals  with chronic                                                                    
conditions. It would be a  very large and increasing problem                                                                    
in the Medicaid Program.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:00:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston asked  Dr. Helvoight  to define  "chronic                                                                    
condition." Dr.  Helvoight replied that a  chronic condition                                                                    
was  a  medical condition  that  lasted  3 or  more  months.                                                                    
Another  definition was  a medical  condition that  lasted a                                                                    
long  time.  There  was  another  definition  of  a  medical                                                                    
condition that  lasted a year  or more. There  was ambiguity                                                                    
in the  definition. He relayed  that for the purpose  of the                                                                    
forecast there  was a list  of diagnostic codes used  in the                                                                    
MMIS to identify a chronic condition.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston   asked  whether,   in  looking   at  any                                                                    
population,  a  cost  driver  of  6  percent  to  7  percent                                                                    
attributed  to chronic  conditions. Dr.  Helvoight responded                                                                    
in  the  affirmative.  However,  he  noted  that  a  chronic                                                                    
condition could exist  from birth. It could  also be related                                                                    
to age, strokes,  falls, and heart disease.  There were also                                                                    
chronic  conditions including  drug addiction,  smoking, and                                                                    
alcohol  abuse.   There  were  several   chronic  conditions                                                                    
related  to   choices.  The  chronic   conditions  sometimes                                                                    
compounded such as  obesity and diabetes. He  added that the                                                                    
longer  a   person  lived,  the   more  likely   they  would                                                                    
experience a chronic condition.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston thought  the story  could change  through                                                                    
some access  to managed  care. She  suggested that  having a                                                                    
wellness  coordinator or  living a  healthy lifestyle  could                                                                    
have  a  significant  impact on  costs  related  to  chronic                                                                    
conditions.  Dr. Helvoight  commented that  although he  had                                                                    
not studied the issue, it  seemed like a logical conclusion.                                                                    
He was not  sure how practical it would be  for the Medicaid                                                                    
Program to implement such a thing.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:04:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston also  noted  the importance  of a  person                                                                    
being   diagnosed  early   with   time   to  provide   early                                                                    
intervention. Dr. Helvoight responded  that he had looked at                                                                    
prevention as  it related to  diabetes. Data  suggested that                                                                    
there  could  be  savings to  the  program  associated  with                                                                    
diabetes    self-management.    However,   the    ease    of                                                                    
implementation was unknown.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter asked for  the resource for chronic                                                                    
conditions.  Dr. Helvoight  responded that  it was  a report                                                                    
done for the Division of Public  Health and it was posted to                                                                    
the  department's website  in December  2018. He  offered to                                                                    
send it  to him.  Representative Carpenter thought  it would                                                                    
be interesting  to be familiar with  the chronic conditions.                                                                    
He suspected if people  made different lifestyle choices the                                                                    
problems would not exist. Dr. Helvoight concurred.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Merrick   asked  if   Medicaid   recipients                                                                    
received  dental,  vision  and  prescription  coverage.  Dr.                                                                    
Helvoight was aware of  pharmaceutical services, vision care                                                                    
for children,  dental care  within healthcare  services, and                                                                    
the adult dental program (a preventative program).                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:07:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wool  asked  if   cancer  was  considered  a                                                                    
chronic illness.  Dr. Helvoight responded  affirmatively. He                                                                    
suggested there  should be further subcategories  of chronic                                                                    
conditions. Many of the conditions were not preventable.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson asked  if  one of  the drivers  of                                                                    
care for  the elderly and  the Medicaid Program was  that it                                                                    
covered long-term  disability. If someone had  the wisdom in                                                                    
their thirties or forties to  purchase it, it was incredibly                                                                    
expensive.  Therefore,  they  typically punted,  relying  on                                                                    
Medicaid. He asked if he  was accurate. Dr. Helvoight agreed                                                                    
that long-term  care was expensive,  and rates  could climb.                                                                    
He personally had not paid  for long-term disability because                                                                    
of not knowing what he was really investing in.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:10:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wool  returned to  the discussion  of chronic                                                                    
care  and the  costs  increasing because  of the  population                                                                    
aging.  He had  mentioned  cancer because  some things  were                                                                    
unavoidable.  He  mentioned  lifestyle  choices  influencing                                                                    
health such  as smoking,  and drinking.  He did  not believe                                                                    
the trend  was that  people were  getting healthier.  On the                                                                    
contrary, people  were getting less healthy.  He wondered if                                                                    
the issue was factored into  the forecast. He thought people                                                                    
had  become more  sedentary over  time  and were  increasing                                                                    
their  chronic conditions  regardless  of  age. He  inquired                                                                    
about Dr. Helvoight's opinion.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Dr.  Helvoight responded  that  the  forecast accounted  for                                                                    
growth in  the rate  of enrollment  in the  Medicaid Program                                                                    
which would  be driven by a  number of factors. Some  of the                                                                    
factors included  issues of chronic conditions  leading to a                                                                    
person  becoming disabled.  He  responded to  Representative                                                                    
Wool's question  about people not getting  healthier. He had                                                                    
read several articles that concurred  that obesity rates had                                                                    
steadily climbed.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carpenter  asked if there was  a component of                                                                    
Medicaid  that encouraged  personal  responsibility. He  was                                                                    
speaking  to   behaviors  that  contributed   to  developing                                                                    
chronic  conditions which  could otherwise  be avoided  with                                                                    
making  different  choices.  He   wondered  if  a  mechanism                                                                    
existed. Dr. Helvoight did not know.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Johnston  indicated  she would  be  recessing  the                                                                    
meeting  until Wednesday  at 10:00  A.M. at  which time  the                                                                    
committee would close  out the budget for  the University of                                                                    
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
^RECESSED TO THE  CALL OF THE CHAIR:  THE MEETING RECONVENED                                                                  
ON WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2020 AT 10:00 A.M.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:14:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:14:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:14 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Ted Helvoigt MESA FY2020-40 02-18-20.pdf HFIN 2/18/2020 1:30:00 PM
HFIN presentation