A Closer Look At The Millions Of People On HCBS Waiting Lists

Home Health Care News | By Patrick Filbin
 
More than half a million people across the U.S. were on state waiting lists for home- and community-based services (HCBS) in 2021.
 
But the number of states that have a waiting list for people who are in need of HCBS is the lowest it’s been since 2016 at 37.
 
However, HCBS waiting lists are often incomplete and sometimes inaccurate, making it difficult to quantify the unmet need for the services financed through Medicaid waivers.
 
In 2021, about 656,000 people were on HCBS waiting lists, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF). That’s lower than the nearly 820,000 individuals that were on Medicaid waitlists for HCBS in 2018.
 
Home- and community-based services are a way to fill gaps in care for seniors with complex medical conditions. Medicaid is often the main source of coverage for long-term services and supports (LTSS).
 
There are well over 2 million individuals receiving HCBS services, but the way waiting lists are calculated can be an unscientific process that can both overstate and understate unmet needs, according to KFF.
 
For example, not all states screen for Medicaid eligibility before adding people to HCBS waiting lists. That can inflate the number on a waiting list by adding people who may never be eligible for services.
 
In its most recent analysis, KFF found that over half of people on HCBS waiting lists lived in states that did not screen people on waiting lists for eligibility.
 
The only HCBS that states are required to cover is home health care, but states can choose to cover personal care and other similar services.
 
Waiting lists can also understate need. States choose which populations they serve through the Medicaid waiver and what resources they will commit.
 
People may need services, but if the state doesn’t offer them — or doesn’t offer them to people over 65, for example — those individuals would not appear on a waiting list.
 
“Even though HCBS waiting lists are an imperfect measure of unmet need, there are no other measures available,” KFF wrote in its summary. “Therefore, waiting lists remain a source of concern to policymakers, and proposals to eliminate them have been put forth by both Republicans and Democrats.”
 
Takeaways from KFF analysis…

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