Abstract

In 2020, Michigan Medicaid implemented a new work requirement policy for enrollees in the Healthy Michigan Plan (HMP), the state's expanded Medicaid program. Under the policy, enrollees would be required to report 80 hours of work or other qualifying activities each month or obtain an exemption to maintain health insurance coverage. To assess the experiences of health navigators (and beneficiaries by proxy) with the implementation of Michigan's Medicaid work requirement. This qualitative study included health navigators who participated in 11 focus groups from September to December 2020. Focus group questions addressed topics related to implementation and communication of the HMP work requirement policy. A survey was administered to capture background information, assess readiness to assist with navigation, and assess the quality of the state's communication about the policy. The main outcomes were general understanding of policy components, communications about the policy, navigation of the exemption process, navigation of the reporting process, and beneficiaries' ability to comply with the policy. Of 50 health navigators who participated in the focus groups, 44 (88.0%) responded to the survey and 43 provided demographic information (mean [SD] age, 44.0 [10.5] years). All 43 had at least some college or vocational education, with 27 (62.8%) reporting a 4-year degree or higher, and they resided in geographic regions across Michigan. Navigators indicated that they felt prepared to assist HMP enrollees navigate work requirements. Communication to beneficiaries regarding the new policy was viewed as an improvement compared with traditional Medicaid communications. However, the complex policy was potentially difficult for beneficiaries to understand. Limited language options besides English created barriers for some enrollees. Exemptions were confusing for beneficiaries owing to the numerous categories and sometimes vague guidelines. Those who used the online reporting system generally found the platform to be user-friendly. Navigators expressed concern regarding HMP enrollees' ability to report compliance with work requirements owing to barriers with internet access, telephone access, language challenges, and computer literacy. In this qualitative analysis of health navigators in Michigan, respondents reported overall positive feedback about many of the implementation and communication strategies, including human-centered design, automatic exemptions, and use of state administrative data to assess whether beneficiaries were in compliance with the policy; however, barriers to reporting remained for enrollees. The findings suggest that state agencies should seek to reduce administrative barriers and apply a human-centered design approach to alleviate risk of unnecessary loss of Medicaid benefits.

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