Letter to Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services - Cortez Masto Leads Letter Calling on Administration to Protect Seniors From Health Coverage Gaps

Letter

Dear Administrator Brooks-LaSure:

Thank you for your work to keep seniors safe and healthy over the course of the COVID-19
pandemic. We appreciate the important services and supports that the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) has administered to help older Americans utilize telehealth, access
COVID-19 testing, vaccines and treatment free of charge, and maintain comprehensive coverage.
However, as the threat of the virus begins to subside and the Biden Administration considers
terminating the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE), we are concerned that the Medicare
beneficiaries may experience avoidable gaps in coverage.

At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress acted quickly to shore up federal health
programs and protect access to affordable coverage for American families. In particular, the
enhanced Medicaid funding and corresponding continuous eligibility provisions of the bipartisan
Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) ensured that children, working adults and
seniors alike could retain their health insurance coverage through the ensuing period of extreme
economic uncertainty and volatility.

Both the funding and coverage provisions of the FFCRA will expire upon termination of the
PHE, at which point states will begin to remove ineligible individuals from their Medicaid
programs. Included among these people are seniors who may have remained on Medicaid despite
becoming eligible for Medicare over the course of the pandemic. This unprecedented transition
could result in coverage losses for millions of Americans.

Because CMS has never before faced a similar situation at this scale, we are concerned that
current beneficiary enrollment processes do not provide adequate coverage options for this type
of transition. Medicare-eligible individuals who lose Medicaid coverage outside of Medicare's
open enrollment period may be unable to elect Part B coverage. This will leave them without
access to comprehensive care, and they may face fines for failing to get covered earlier.

We urge you to provide a smooth transition to Medicare coverage for these seniors through a
special enrollment period, and to exempt them from any financial penalties that would otherwise
be assessed for late enrollment. CMS and stakeholder partners should conduct extensive outreach
to raise awareness among seniors of this coverage change, and ensure they have the tools and
information necessary to choose the Medicare coverage option that works best for them.

COVID-19 has been especially difficult for older Americans, and we must do everything
possible to support their needs as we emerge from the pandemic. Thank you for your attention to
this matter, and we look forward to working together on our shared goal of protecting access to
quality health care for seniors.

Sincerely


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