Kentucky Medicaid dashboard, which has numbers for each county; FFS means "fee for service," which is separate from managed care. |
Anthem Kentucky has failed in its attempt to remain as the manager of Medicaid coverage for about 170,000 Kentuckians, because the Kentucky Supreme Court deadlocked on the insurance company's appeal of a Court of Appeals ruling that upheld the state's decision to give the work to five other insurers.
Anthem had questioned the bidding process, and Franklin Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd ordered rebidding, but some of the other managed-care companies appealed, and in 2022 the state Court of Appeals overturned Shepherd's decision.
On Anthem's appeal to the Supreme Court, argued last week, the justices were divided 3-3, meaning that the Court of Appeals decision stands. Justices Angela McCormick Bisig of Louisville, Robert Conley of Ashland and Michelle Keller of Northern Kentucky voted to affirm the appeals court, while Justices Debra Hembree Lambert of Somerset, Christopher Shea Nickell of Paducah and Chief Justice Laurance B. VanMeter of Lexington voted to overturn it.
The seventh justice, Justice Kelly Thompson of Bowling Green, did not hear the case and did not vote. He told Kentucky Health News that he was disqualified because he was involved in the case while he was on the Court of Appeals.
Anthem had remained a Medicaid manager pending the outcome of the case. Asked what will happen to the 170,000 Medicaid members whose care the company manages, Cabinet for Health and Family Services spokesman Brice Mitchell said in an email, "The cabinet’s goal is for no Kentuckian to be without health coverage as it is a basic human right. We are responsible for complying with court orders and will do so once the case becomes final." That is usually 30 days after a decision, the deadline for asking the court to rehear the case.
The current managed-care contracts expire at the end of 2024, so Anthem will have another chance to get part of the business from the program, which spends $15 billion a year in Kentucky, more than 70 percent of it federal money.
The current managed-care contracts expire at the end of 2024, so Anthem will have another chance to get part of the business from the program, which spends $15 billion a year in Kentucky, more than 70 percent of it federal money.
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