Awards may be renewed for up to three years and will cover post-enrollment activities.
This summer, MassHealth starting enforcing the rule that households who hadn’t paid their premium bills for 60 days or more would lose their MassHealth or Children’s Medical Security Program (CMSP) coverage. Members of these households may be starting to show up at hospitals and health centers, they may have no coverage, and they can’t get the Health Safety Net.
MassHealth responds to questions and notes compiled by advocates during site visits to MECs.
Tell EOHHS what their funding priorities should be next year.
Tools from MLRI can help translate some knowledge of a person’s immigration status into eligibility.
A one-page chart clearly outlines who can receive which benefits and under what circumstances.
Massachusetts residents with questions about medications or difficulty paying for them can get help.
"Outreach & enrollment" means much more than putting up posters and helping people fill out MassHealth applications. Recently, over the course of a two hour appointment, my supervisor and I counseled one household on eleven different public health insurance, subsidy and care programs. We helped them file four separate applications to five different insurance programs, putting together a patchwork of care options to cover the hole left by the loss of employer-sponsored insurance.
An overview of major parts of the Massachusetts Health Care Reform Law.
When one of our patients contacted me to tell me about his loss of the Commonwealth Care coverage that he'd had for about three months, I was surprised, to say the least. It was the middle of the month, so it wasn't a technical coverage cut-off; he had paid his premium, was undergoing treatment with the Visiting Nurses Association (VNA) and getting medication from the pharmacy. You can imagine his surprise, among other emotions, when the VNA and the pharmacy told him that his coverage was no longer active and they couldn't help him.