Abstract

In 2004, Democratic Governor Philip Bredesen of Tennessee announced a plan to reform TennCare, the state’s Medicaid program. The reform package proposed to remove 323,000 adults from the program, which represented the most drastic cuts to Medicaid since its creation in 1965. The reform measure also allowed beneficiaries disenrolled from the program to appeal the decisions to the state Department of Human Services. This study examines how race and policy backlash—that is the backlash against Medicaid expansion—influenced the appellate process for beneficiaries removed from the program in Tennessee. The main argument is that race—especially the predisposition of African Americans—influenced the outcome of the appellate proceedings. The theoretical framework advanced in this study explains how procedural deliberations (legal decisions, policy disputes, administrative hearings) exacerbate disparities and produce differential outcomes that correspond with racial and other ascriptive hierarchies. The data for this research, comprising more than 60,000 former TennCare beneficiaries, were obtained through Open Records Requests in compliance with Tennessee state law. Using logistic regressions, the findings reveal a relationship between race and appellate proceedings. African Americans were treated unfairly in the early stage of the appellate process and those from racially polarized voting areas were less likely to receive fair rulings by hearing examiners. Additional findings identified age-related disparities between younger and older appellants, as well as a regional disadvantage between rural and urban beneficiaries.

Highlights

  • In 2004, Democratic Governor Philip Bredesen of Tennessee announced a plan to reformTennCare, the state’s Medicaid program

  • This study examines how race and policy backlash—that is the backlash against Medicaid expansion—influenced the appellate process for beneficiaries disenrolled from the program

  • This research evaluates how legal and policy decisions deliberated in state bureaucracy—what is sometimes referred to as the “black box” of government—reinforce hierarchies that are especially disadvantageous to African Americans [6,7]

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Summary

Introduction

In 2004, Democratic Governor Philip Bredesen of Tennessee announced a plan to reform. This study examines how race and policy backlash—that is the backlash against Medicaid expansion—influenced the appellate process for beneficiaries disenrolled from the program. The study is buttressed by archival documents of the TennCare policy debate obtained from the TennCare Saves Lives Coalition (TCSLC), the leading advocacy group opposing the reform measures from 2004–2006 Analyzing these data with logistic regression reveals the relationship between race and appellate proceedings. The first part of this study lays out a theoretical framework for evaluating how procedural disadvantages, hidden biases, and political signaling inform administrative law decisions This is followed by a closer examination of the controversies involving TennCare policy in the state. Drawing from the TennCare dataset, this study examines the differential outcomes found in the TennCare appellate proceedings

Differential Policy and Procedural Outcomes
Procedural Disadvantage and Administrative Hearings
Hidden Biases and Administrative Law
Political Signaling and Public Salience
TennCare: A Case Study of Tennessee’s Medicaid Program
Data and Methods
Findings
TennCare
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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