94-6540. Medicaid Program; Low-Income Eligibility Groups and Coverage of Services; Legislative Changes

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 56 (Wednesday, March 23, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-6540]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: March 23, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Health Care Financing Administration
    
    42 CFR Parts 431, 435, 436, 440, and 447
    
    [MB-13-P]
    RIN 0938-AD17
    
     
    
    Medicaid Program; Low-Income Eligibility Groups and Coverage of 
    Services; Legislative Changes
    
    AGENCY: Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), HHS.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This proposed rule would amend the Medicaid regulations to: 
    incorporate categorically needy eligibility groups of pregnant women, 
    infants, and children and aged and disabled individuals with incomes 
    related to the Federal poverty income guidelines; expand the deemed 
    eligibility group of newborn children; expand the eligibility group of 
    qualified children; clarify eligibility of homeless individuals; 
    provide for the continuous eligibility of pregnant women without regard 
    to changes in income; provide for ambulatory prenatal care for certain 
    pregnant women during a limited period of presumptive eligibility, 
    based on income eligibility only; and tie the medical assistance 
    program to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) payment 
    levels in the State.
        The amendments would conform the regulations to provisions of the 
    Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Acts of 1990 and 1989, the Medicare 
    Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, the Family Support Act of 1988, the 
    Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Acts of 1987 and 1986, and the Homeless 
    Eligibility Clarification Act of 1986.
    
    DATES: Written comments will be considered if we receive them at the 
    appropriate address, as provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on May 23, 
    1994.
    
    ADDRESSES: Mail written comments (original and 3 copies) to the 
    following address: Health Care Financing Administration, Department of 
    Health and Human Services, Attention: MB-13-P, P.O. Box 7518, 
    Baltimore, Maryland 21207-0518.
        Please address a copy of comments on information collection 
    requirements to: Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Attn.: 
    Laura Oliven, Office of Management and Budget, Room 3002, New Executive 
    Office Building, Washington, DC 20503.
        If you prefer, you may deliver your written comments (original and 
    3 copies) to one of the following locations:
    
        Room 309-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue, 
    SW., Washington, DC 20201, or Room 132, East High Rise Building, 6325 
    Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21207.
    
        Due to staffing and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments 
    by facsimile (FAX) transmission. In commenting, please refer to file 
    code MB-13-P. Comments received timely will be available for public 
    inspection as they are received, beginning approximately 3 weeks after 
    publication, in Room 309-G of the Departmental offices at 200 
    Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC, on Monday through Friday of 
    each week from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. (202-690-7890).
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marinos Svolos, (410) 966-4452 
    (Eligibility) Robert Wardwell, (410) 966-5659 (Coverage of services).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        Under title XIX of the Social Security Act (the Act), generally 
    States with Medicaid programs are required to provide Medicaid 
    eligibility to individuals, children, and families who are receiving, 
    or are deemed to be receiving, cash assistance under the aid to 
    families with dependent children (AFDC) program, the supplemental 
    security income (SSI) program, and the mandatory State supplement 
    program; and to certain other needy pregnant women and children 
    (referred to as the mandatory categorically needy eligibility groups). 
    At State option, States may provide Medicaid to individuals who meet 
    the categorical and financial requirements for the cash assistance 
    programs but, for various reasons, are not receiving such assistance--
    for example, individuals who are in institutions or have not applied 
    for cash assistance benefits--and to certain other specified needy 
    groups (referred to as the optional categorically needy eligibility 
    groups).
        In addition to categorically needy groups, States, at their option, 
    may provide Medicaid to individuals who would be eligible for the cash 
    assistance programs except that they have income or resources above 
    allowable levels (referred to as the medically needy eligibility 
    group). The medically needy are permitted to reduce their income to the 
    allowed level by deducting (spending down) incurred medical expenses to 
    become eligible for Medicaid.
        In recent years, a number of statutes have been enacted that 
    established new eligibility groups, revised existing eligibility 
    groups, or expanded services to certain low-income individuals. On 
    October 21, 1986, Congress passed provisions of the Omnibus Budget 
    Reconciliation Act of 1986 (OBRA '86), Public Law 99-509, that amended 
    the Social Security Act to expand the Medicaid eligibility groups. 
    States were given the option of providing Medicaid to certain needy 
    individuals who had incomes up to a certain specified percentage of 
    Federal poverty income guidelines and who previously were not eligible 
    for Medicaid as categorically needy. These individuals included 
    pregnant women, infants, and children (section 9401) and aged and 
    disabled individuals (section 9402). In addition, section 9407 allowed 
    States to provide ambulatory prenatal care to pregnant women during a 
    presumptive eligibility period on the basis of income eligibility only.
        OBRA '86 also clarified Medicaid eligibility of homeless 
    individuals who are residents of a State, regardless of whether or not 
    they maintain a home at a fixed address or maintain it permanently 
    (section 9405). In addition, section 11005 of the Homeless Eligibility 
    Clarification Act (title XI of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, Public 
    Law 99-570), enacted on October 27, 1986, requires that a State 
    Medicaid plan provide for a method of making medical services 
    eligibility cards available to Medicaid-eligible individuals who do not 
    reside in a permanent dwelling or at a fixed address.
        The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA '87), Public 
    Law 100-203, enacted on December 22, 1987, made further changes in the 
    Social Security Act to expand the optional eligibility groups of low-
    income pregnant women, infants, and children and the mandatory 
    eligibility group of qualified children under a certain age. OBRA '87 
    also allowed a State to impose a monthly premium on optional 
    categorically needy pregnant women and infants with incomes between 150 
    and 185 percent of the Federal poverty level. In addition, section 4105 
    of OBRA '87 clarified Medicaid coverage of clinic services furnished 
    outside of clinic facilities to homeless individuals.
        The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 (MCCA), Public Law 
    100-360, enacted on July 1, 1988, also further amended provisions 
    relating to the eligibility groups of individuals with incomes related 
    to the Federal poverty income level. MCCA made some of the low-income 
    pregnant women and infants mandatory Medicaid eligibility groups (those 
    at or below 75 percent of the poverty level and then, a year later, 100 
    percent of the poverty level) and amended the eligibility criteria for 
    others.
        The Family Support Act of 1988 (FSA), Public Law 100-485, enacted 
    on October 13, 1988, made several technical corrections to the Medicaid 
    provisions of the Social Security Act. These corrections related to the 
    description of the eligibility groups of low-income pregnant women, 
    infants, and children.
        The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA '89), Public 
    Law 101-239, enacted on December 19, 1989, changed the mandatory 
    eligibility groups of low-income pregnant women and infants by 
    increasing the income criteria to at or below 133 percent (instead of 
    at or below 100 percent) of the Federal poverty income level; and added 
    a new mandatory group of low-income children who are age one but have 
    not attained age 6 who have incomes at or below 133 percent of the 
    Federal poverty level. OBRA '89 mandated a percentage greater than 133 
    percent of the Federal poverty level for the pregnant women and infants 
    groups if the State had such a greater percentage in its State plan 
    (whether approved or not) as of the date of enactment of OBRA '89, or 
    established under State authorizing legislation or State appropriations 
    as of December 19, 1989, when it covered these pregnant women or 
    infants, or both, as optional categorically needy groups. Low-income 
    children who are age 6 but have not attained age 7, or at State option, 
    age 8 with incomes at or below 100 percent of the Federal poverty level 
    remained an optional categorically needy group. These provisions were 
    effective on April 1, 1990.
        The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA '90), Public 
    Law 101-508, enacted on November 5, 1990, made additional changes to 
    both the mandatory and optional groups of pregnant women, infants, and 
    children. OBRA '90 created a new group of mandatory categorically needy 
    children who are at least age 6 but have not yet reached age 19. These 
    are children born after September 30, 1983 with family income at or 
    below 100 percent of the Federal poverty level. OBRA '90 made 
    corresponding changes to the mandatory eligibility group of qualified 
    children to include children born after September 30, 1983 who have not 
    attained age 19 and to allow States to use an earlier date of birth in 
    order to include older children sooner than is mandated.
        In addition, OBRA '90 mandated that a State provide continuous 
    eligibility to pregnant women throughout the pregnancy and postpartum 
    period without regard to changes in income. (This had been a State 
    option.) OBRA '90 also changed the requirement for newborns who are 
    deemed to be eligible as a result of their mothers' eligibility status. 
    Previously, a newborn was considered eligible at birth if the newborn's 
    mother was eligible for and receiving Medicaid. The newborn could 
    remain eligible for as long as a year if the mother remained eligible 
    and the infant was a member of the mother's household. With the OBRA 
    '90 change, a newborn may still remain eligible for as long as a year 
    if the mother loses eligibility but would remain eligible if she were 
    pregnant.
        Finally, OBRA '90 made several changes to presumptive eligibility 
    for pregnant women by eliminating the existing time limit on the 
    presumptive period and allowing a pregnant woman to remain 
    presumptively eligible until the State makes a determination on her 
    regular application for Medicaid or, if she does not file a regular 
    application, the last day of the month following the month in which she 
    was determined presumptively eligible. OBRA '90 also provided that the 
    application given to a presumptively eligible pregnant woman could be 
    the application used by the State to determine the regular Medicaid 
    eligibility of low-income pregnant women under section 1902(1)(1)(A).
        This document proposes to incorporate provisions of OBRA '86, '87, 
    '89, and '90, the Homeless Eligibility Clarification Act, MCCA, and FSA 
    in the Medicaid regulations, as outlined and discussed in the following 
    section of this document. (Additional related provisions in these laws 
    are being addressed in separate rulemaking documents.)
    
    II. Discussion of Legislative Provisions and Proposed Amendments to 
    Regulations
    
    A. Low-Income Pregnant Women, Infants, and Children
    
        Section 9401 of OBRA '86 amended the Social Security Act by adding 
    new sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) and 1902(1) to establish optional 
    categorically needy groups of pregnant women and women during the 60-
    day period beginning on the last day of pregnancy, infants, and 
    children up to age 5 whose income does not exceed a State-established 
    standard that is a specified percentage of the Federal nonfarm poverty 
    income guidelines. Under OBRA '86, a State could establish this income 
    standard at a level at or below 100 percent of the Federal poverty 
    guidelines. A State had to cover both pregnant women and infants (it 
    could not cover either group separately) and it had to cover both of 
    these groups in order to cover children.
        OBRA '86 also amended section 1902(e) to provide that States that 
    have chosen to cover infants and children under section 1902(1) must 
    continue to cover those infants and children under certain 
    circumstances. Under section 1902(e)(7), if the infants and children 
    are receiving covered inpatient services at the time they reach the age 
    limits under the State plan, the State must cover them until the end of 
    their inpatient stay if they remain otherwise eligible. Also, OBRA '86 
    specifically exempted the group of individuals described in section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) from the limits on family income which affect a 
    State's Federal financial participation (FFP) under section 1903(f)(4) 
    of the Act.
        Later legislation changed the age limit for children and the 
    percentage of the poverty level for the income standard. Specifically, 
    section 4101(c) of OBRA '87 raised the maximum age for low-income 
    children from age 5 up to age 8. Section 4101(a)(1) of OBRA '87 
    increased the percentage of the poverty guidelines at which the income 
    standard could be set to 185 percent for pregnant women and infants 
    under age 1, effective July 1, 1988. However, for children age 1 up to 
    age 8, section 4101 retained the percentage level at no more than 100 
    percent of the Federal poverty guidelines (or, if the State had chosen 
    to cover pregnant women and infants with a percentage of income below 
    100 percent, the percentage for children had to equal the percentage 
    used for the pregnant women and infants). Section 4118 of OBRA '87 also 
    removed the reference to ``nonfarm'' in the description of the Federal 
    poverty income guidelines to be used. In addition, section 4101(d) of 
    OBRA '87 amended section 1916 of the Act to allow States to charge a 
    premium to optional groups of low-income pregnant women and infants who 
    have family incomes above a specified level.
        Section 302 of MCCA added section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) to the 
    Social Security Act, which required States to provide mandatory 
    eligibility to groups of pregnant women and infants up to one year of 
    age with incomes at or below 75 percent of the Federal poverty income 
    guidelines, effective July 1, 1989. Those States that, as of enactment 
    of MCCA, offered eligibility to pregnant women and infants with incomes 
    at 100 percent of the poverty level (or at some lower income threshold 
    between 75 percent and 100 percent) were required to continue 
    eligibility at this level. A State had to provide an income level that 
    reflected at least the percentage of poverty specified in an amendment 
    to its State plan to cover these groups (whether the amendment had been 
    approved or not). Even if there was no percentage specified in the 
    State plan, the maintenance of eligibility requirement also applied to 
    percentages established under a State's authorizing legislation or 
    provided for under the State's appropriations in order to provide 
    Medicaid to these individuals before July 1, 1989. MCCA also provided 
    that, effective July 1, 1990, mandatory eligibility was required for 
    groups of pregnant women and infants under age one with incomes at or 
    below 100 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines. In addition 
    to creating mandatory groups of pregnant women and infants, the MCCA 
    eliminated the requirement in section 1902(1)(4) that States cover both 
    pregnant women and infants in order to cover either group and to cover 
    both groups in order to cover children. We have interpreted this MCCA 
    amendment to allow States to cover optional groups of pregnant women 
    and infants separately and with different income levels. Coverage of 
    groups of pregnant women or infants, or both, with incomes above the 
    mandatory percentages (75 percent, effective July 1, 1989, and 100 
    percent, effective July 1, 1990) but at or below 185 percent of the 
    poverty level and children age 1 year to age 8 years with incomes at or 
    below 100 percent of the poverty level remained optional under the MCCA 
    provisions.
        The MCCA also amended section 1902(e)(7) to provide continued 
    coverage to all of the revised groups of children under section 1902(1) 
    until the end of their inpatient stays. It also amended section 
    1903(f)(4) to exempt from the FFP income limits all of the redefined 
    mandatory and optional groups in section 1902(1) and specifically made 
    the use of less restrictive income and resource methodologies under 
    section 1902(r)(2) apply to several groups, including the mandatory 
    groups of women and infants in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), and to 
    all optional categorically needy groups, including the optional group 
    of women, infants, and children in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX).
        The changes made by section 302 of MCCA applied to payments for 
    medical assistance for calendar quarters beginning on or after July 1, 
    1989, with respect to eligibility on or after that date. The effective 
    date applied whether or not we had promulgated final rules to interpret 
    the provisions by that date. However, a State could, under certain 
    circumstances, request a delayed implementation date in order to enact 
    State legislation.
        Section 6401 of OBRA '89 revised the provisions under MCCA by 
    further amending the eligibility groups of low-income pregnant women, 
    infants, and children up to age 8. First, section 6401 changed the 
    income criteria for the mandatory eligibility groups of low-income 
    pregnant women and infants up to age 1 under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) of the Act by increasing the income level 
    criteria from no less than 100 percent of the Federal poverty income 
    level to no less than 133 percent of the Federal poverty income level, 
    effective April 1, 1990. The law mandates that a State use a percentage 
    greater than 133 percent (but no greater than 185 percent) of the 
    Federal poverty income level if the State had such a higher percentage 
    for optional categorically needy groups of pregnant women and infants 
    as of the date of enactment of OBRA '89 in its State plan (whether 
    approved or not) or established by State authorizing legislation or 
    State appropriations. Second, OBRA '89 established under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI) of the Act a new mandatory eligibility group of 
    low-income children age 1 up to age 6. The State was required to 
    establish an income level for this group that equaled 133 percent of 
    the Federal poverty income level. States could continue to cover as 
    optional categorically needy other low-income children age 6 up to age 
    7 or, at State option, up to age 8 who are born after September 30, 
    1983. The income level for this group of children age 6 up to age 8 
    would continue to be established at a level not to exceed 100 percent 
    of the Federal poverty income level.
        Section 6401 of OBRA '89 also made conforming changes to section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) (excluding the mandatory group of children in 
    section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI) from the group of optional categorically 
    needy), other parts of section 1902(1) (changed the descriptions of 
    low-income groups of pregnant women, infants, and children), section 
    1902(e)(7) (added the new group of mandatory children to the 
    continuation of inpatient hospital services for infants and children 
    who have reached the maximum age for eligibility), section 1902(r)(2) 
    (made the use of less restrictive income and resource methodologies 
    than cash assistance methodologies apply to the new group of mandatory 
    children), and section 1903(f)(4) (exempted the new group of mandatory 
    children from the limitations on Medicaid payments). In addition, 
    section 6411(i)(3) of OBRA '89 amended section 1925 (a)(3)(C) and 
    (b)(3)(C)(i) to require States to determine if children who would cease 
    to receive extended Medicaid under section 1925 may be eligible for 
    Medicaid under sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(i) (IV) or (VI) or 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) before terminating eligibility based on section 
    1925.
        The changes made by section 6401 applied to payments for medical 
    assistance for calendar quarters beginning on or after April 1, 1990, 
    with respect to eligibility on or after that date. The effective date 
    applied whether or not we had promulgated final rules to interpret the 
    provisions by that date. However, a State could, under certain 
    circumstances, request a delayed implementation date in order to enact 
    State legislation. Section 6411(i)(3) was effective as if enacted as 
    part of the Family Support Act of 1988.
        Section 4601 of OBRA '90 established a new mandatory group of low-
    income children under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII) of the Act. This 
    group described in 1902(l)(1)(D) of the Act includes children born 
    after September 30, 1983 who have attained age 6 but have not attained 
    age 19. The State must establish an income standard for this group of 
    children which equals 100 percent of the Federal poverty level. Section 
    4601 made conforming changes to section 1905(n)(2) of the Act which 
    defines qualified children. Children born after September 30, 1983 who 
    have not attained age 19 are now included in the mandatory group of 
    qualified children. In addition, States have the option to choose an 
    earlier date of birth if they wish to phase in this group more quickly. 
    Section 4601 made additional conforming changes to (1) section 
    1902(r)(2) to allow States to use less restrictive income and resource 
    methodologies than those used under the cash assistance programs in 
    determining financial eligibility of the new group under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII); (2) section 1903(f)(4) of the Act to exempt the 
    new group of mandatory children from the limitations on Medicaid 
    payments; and (3) section 1925 of the Act to require that States 
    determine whether a child is eligible under this new mandatory group 
    before terminating eligibility based on section 1925.
        The changes made by section 4601 applied to payments for medical 
    assistance for calendar quarters beginning on or after July 1, 1991. 
    The effective date applied whether or not we had promulgated final 
    rules to interpret the provisions by that date. However, a State could, 
    under certain circumstances, request a delayed implementation date in 
    order to enact State legislation.
        Section 1902(l) of the Act, as added by section 9401 of OBRA '86 
    and amended by section 4101 of OBRA '87, section 302 of MCCA, section 
    608(d)(15) of FSA, section 6401 of OBRA '89, and section 4601 of OBRA 
    '90, specifies the eligibility conditions for the mandatory groups of 
    pregnant women and infants under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), the 
    mandatory group of children age 1 up to age 6 under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI), the mandatory group of children age 6 up to age 
    19 under section 1902 (a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), and the optional 
    categorically needy groups of pregnant women and infants under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX).
    1. Income Standard
        Eligibility of individuals who fall into one of the mandatory and 
    optional groups of low-income pregnant women, infants, and children is 
    based on these individuals meeting State-established income standards. 
    States must establish their income standards at a level that does not 
    exceed the specified percentage of the Federal poverty income 
    guidelines for a family equal to the size of the family, including the 
    woman, infant, or child. Because the official poverty guidelines are 
    revised annually to adjust for inflation, States will be automatically 
    increasing the income standards established to keep pace with inflation 
    as a result of the changes in the poverty guidelines. (HHS determines 
    official Federal poverty income guidelines and issues them in the 
    Federal Register annually, usually during the month of February. See, 
    for example, 58 FR 8287, February 12, 1993.) For optional groups of 
    pregnant women and infants, the agency may establish separate income 
    standards or use a single standard.
        Under section 1902(l)(3)(E), as added by OBRA '86 and amended by 
    section 4101(e)(3) of OBRA '87, in determining whether the income of 
    members of the low-income groups of pregnant women, infants, and 
    children meets the established income standards, States must use the 
    same methodologies as applied in determining financial eligibility for 
    AFDC, or for title IV-E as appropriate, except to the extent that the 
    methodologies are inconsistent with section 1902(a)(17)(D) of the Act. 
    Section 4101(e)(3) of OBRA '87 clarified that, in determining family 
    income, States must not use any AFDC methodologies (such as stepparent, 
    grandparent, or sibling deeming) that are inconsistent with the deeming 
    policies specific to Medicaid under section 1902(a)(17)(D) of the Act 
    (H. Rep. 391, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. 446 (1987)). Section 
    1902(a)(17)(D) of the Act provides, in part, that in determining 
    financial responsibility of relatives, only the income of spouses may 
    be considered as available to spouses, and only the income of parents 
    may be considered as available to a child until the child is 21, unless 
    the child is blind or disabled. The methodologies include, but are not 
    limited to, those used for disregarding income. States also are not 
    permitted to allow individuals whose eligibility is determined based on 
    membership in these low-income groups to spend down; that is, the State 
    may not deduct the costs of incurred medical expenses or any other type 
    of remedial care from income, in determining whether an individual's 
    income meets the income standard established by the State.
        The requirements for determining financial eligibility of low-
    income pregnant women, infants, and children were also affected by 
    section 303(e) of MCCA. Section 303(e) established a new section 
    1902(r)(2) to permit States, at their option, to use less restrictive 
    income and resource methodologies than those used under the cash 
    assistance programs (e.g., AFDC or SSI), in determining financial 
    eligibility for a number of groups, including the mandatory groups of 
    pregnant women and infants in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and the 
    optional groups of pregnant women, infants, and children in section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX). Section 6401 of OBRA '89 specifically made 
    section 1902(r)(2) applicable to the mandatory group of low-income 
    children age 1 up to age 6 in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI). Section 
    4601 of OBRA '90 specifically made section 1902(r)(2) applicable to the 
    mandatory group of low-income children age 6 up to age 19 in section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII).
        We believe that the specific preclusion of a spenddown in section 
    1902(l) was not modified by section 1902(r)(2). However, States may use 
    other more liberal methodologies to the extent that they are consistent 
    with section 1902(r)(2).
        Section 1902(l)(1) of the Act specifically states that the income 
    standards established by the State must correlate to a family size that 
    includes the woman, infant, or child. The statute does not specifically 
    address whether the pregnant woman's unborn child must be counted in 
    determining family size. However, the legislative history supports 
    counting the pregnant woman as if her child were born and living with 
    her. The language of the 1986 House Committee Report that addressed the 
    section 1902(l)(1) provision states that ``in determining a pregnant 
    woman's family income level, the Committee intends that a State would 
    treat the woman as if her child were born and living with her at the 
    time she applied for assistance. Thus, a single woman would be treated 
    as a family of two, a pregnant woman living with a spouse or child as a 
    family of three, and so forth * * *'' (H. Rep. No. 727, 99th Cong., 2d 
    Sess. 100 (1986)). The House bill that accompanied this report states 
    that the family size should be equal to ``the family including the 
    woman or child.'' Even though the language is not specific in section 
    1902(l)(1), we believe the legislative history reveals that Congress 
    intended that the unborn child be included under this provision.
        We proposed to specify in these proposed regulations that the 
    family size includes the ``unborn child and other members of the 
    Medicaid budgetary unit.'' Policies relating to the Medicaid budgetary 
    unit were addressed in a final rule with comment period published in 
    the Federal Register on January 19, 1993 (58 FR 4908), and are, 
    therefore, not being addressed in this preamble. The effective date of 
    the January 1993 rule has been delayed (58 FR 9120, February 19, 1993; 
    58 FR 44457, August 23, 1993; and 59 FR 8138, February 18, 1994). We 
    will conform the policies on the Medicaid budgetary unit contained in 
    these proposed regulations with whatever policy is in effect at the 
    time that we issue these proposed regulations as final.
    2. Resource Standard
        The statute allows States, at their option, to apply a resource 
    standard to the low-income eligibility groups of pregnant women, 
    infants, and children under section 1902(1) of the Act. Section 9401 of 
    OBRA '86 establishes a floor for the resource standard that is a 
    specific and objective standard. If a State chooses to apply a resource 
    standard, the standard may be no more restrictive than that applied 
    under SSI for pregnant women, and than that applied under AFDC, for 
    infants and children. (If Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands 
    elect to apply a resource standard, that standard for pregnant women 
    may be no more restrictive than that applied under SSI under section 
    1613 of the Act. This is because the reference to the resource standard 
    for pregnant women in the statute is to the standard that is applied 
    under title XVI (that is, SSI) and not to the standard that is applied 
    under the State plan program under title XVI.)
        The amendments regarding the different treatment of income and 
    resources for the mandatory and optional groups of low-income pregnant 
    women, infants, and children do not require or permit this different 
    treatment to be applied to other Medicaid eligibility groups under the 
    comparability provisions of section 1902(a)(17) of the Act.
    3. Applicability for States With Section 1115 Waivers and for 
    Territories
        Section 302(c) of MCCA struck the original section 1902(1)(4)(A) of 
    the Act and section 302(d) of MCCA added a new section 1902(1)(4)(A). 
    Under the new section 1902(1)(4)(A), as amended by section 6401 of OBRA 
    '89 and section 4601 of OBRA '90, States that are providing Medicaid 
    under a waiver granted under section 1115 of the Act must provide 
    mandatory categorically needy eligibility to pregnant women and infants 
    under age 1 with incomes at or below 133 percent of the poverty level 
    under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), children age 1 but under age 6 
    with incomes at or below 133 percent of the poverty level under section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI) and children who have attained age 6 but are 
    under age 19 with incomes at or below 100 percent of the poverty level 
    under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII) in the same manner as other 
    States. States operating under a waiver granted under section 1115 of 
    the Act must (as all other States must) cover the mandatory groups at 
    higher levels if they have already chosen to use those higher levels. 
    However, Guam, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the 
    Northern Mariana Islands retain the option of providing Medicaid to the 
    otherwise mandatory groups of low-income pregnant women, infants, and 
    children. The Territories may establish separate or identical income 
    standards for pregnant women and infants at any percentage of the 
    poverty level at or below 185 percent. However, if a Territory chooses 
    to cover children from age 1 up to age 6, it must cover all such 
    children with incomes at or below 133 percent of the poverty level. 
    Also, if a Territory chooses to cover children born after September 30, 
    1983 who have attained age 6 but are under age 19, it must cover all 
    such children with incomes at or below 100 percent of the poverty 
    level.
    4. Comparability of Services
        Section 1902(a)(10) of the Act, as amended by section 9401 of OBRA 
    '86, section 4101 of OBRA '87, and section 302(a)(1)(C) of MCCA, 
    contains an exemption to the comparability of services requirements at 
    section 1902(a)(10)(B) for services furnished to pregnant women 
    described in section 1902(l)(1)(A) of the Act who are eligible as 
    mandatory or optional categorically needy under the provisions of 
    sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX). The amended 
    provision (under clause (VII) following what is currently paragraph (F) 
    of section 1902(a)(10)) provides that the services that are available 
    to pregnant women under the section 1902(l) low-income eligibility 
    groups are limited to services relating to pregnancy (including 
    prenatal, delivery, family planning, and postpartum services) and to 
    other conditions that may complicate pregnancy. (Section 4101(e)(1) of 
    OBRA '87 expanded services related to pregnancy to include ``family 
    planning.'')
        The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA), Public 
    Law 99-272, enacted an earlier comparability of services requirement 
    for all pregnant women covered under the State plan. This requirement 
    appears under clause (V) following what is currently paragraph (F) of 
    section 1902(a)(10). This provision states that if a State makes 
    available ``services relating to pregnancy (including prenatal, 
    delivery, and postpartum services) or to any other condition which may 
    complicate pregnancy,'' the State is not required to provide these 
    services to any other individual, except pregnant women, covered under 
    the plan. The State must provide its pregnancy-related services and 
    services for any other condition that may complicate pregnancy, in the 
    same amount, duration, and scope, to all pregnant women covered under 
    the State plan, including pregnant women whose pregnancy is not the 
    basis for their Medicaid eligibility (e.g., those receiving AFDC or 
    SSI). (See Secs. 440.210 and 440.220).
        We issued a separate document to interpret this and other 
    provisions of COBRA. In it, we left to the States the responsibility 
    for defining these services listed in the statute within the bounds of 
    broad policy guidelines (54 FR 7798, February 23, 1989 and 55 FR 48601, 
    November 21, 1990). We believe that the same principles apply for the 
    pregnancy-related services and services which may complicate pregnancy 
    which are specific to the section 1902(1) group of women. (See 
    Sec. 440.250(q).)
        Generally, the State plan includes services identified in section 
    1905(a) (1) through (24) of the Act (mandatory and optional services 
    that are considered as medical assistance to Medicaid recipients). Many 
    of these services can qualify as appropriate components of the areas of 
    care required by the statute; that is, prenatal services, delivery 
    services, postpartum services, and family planning services, and 
    services related to conditions that may complicate pregnancy. For 
    example, physicians' services in section 1905(a)(5) can qualify as 
    prenatal services, since examinations by a physician are part of 
    prenatal care, and as delivery services, since a physician may also 
    deliver the woman's baby. Therefore, a State plan must provide pregnant 
    women with what the State has decided are enough services identified in 
    section 1905(a) to sufficiently cover each of the required areas of 
    care. In addition, a State, at its option, may provide services under 
    section 1905(a) of the Act (for example, rehabilitative services or 
    nutritional supplements) only to pregnant women and not to any other 
    categorically needy eligible Medicaid recipient, as long as such 
    services qualify as either services related to pregnancy or to other 
    conditions that may complicate pregnancy. A State would not be required 
    to specifically identify which services it provides to pregnant women. 
    However, the State would be required to specify in its plan that it 
    covers each of the required areas of care.
        We interpret ``pregnancy-related services'' to mean those services 
    which are needed because the woman is or was pregnant, either because 
    they are necessary for the health of the pregnant woman or fetus or 
    because the services became necessary as a result of the woman having 
    been pregnant. These include, but are not limited to, prenatal care, 
    delivery, family planning, and postpartum services.
        On the other hand, ``services relating to any other condition which 
    may complicate pregnancy'' are not ``pregnancy related'' because they 
    do not arise because of the pregnancy. These services include those for 
    diagnosis or treatment of illnesses or medical conditions which might 
    threaten the carrying of the fetus to full term or the safe delivery of 
    the fetus. Because these services are for conditions ``which may 
    complicate the pregnancy,'' the services can be provided only while the 
    woman is pregnant.
        It is important to note that, unlike the other eligibility groups 
    of pregnant women who are entitled to at least the full range of 
    services available under a particular State's Medicaid plan to 
    recipients of the same eligibility group, these low-income 
    categorically needy pregnant women are only entitled to pregnancy-
    related services (including family planning services) and services for 
    the treatment of conditions that may complicate pregnancy.
        Infants and children in these eligibility groups are eligible for 
    all appropriate Medicaid services included in the approved State plan.
    5. Premiums for Pregnant Women and Infants
        Section 4101(d) of OBRA '87 redesignated section 1916(c) as 1916(d) 
    and created a new section 1916(c) which permits States to impose a 
    monthly premium on optional categorically needy low-income pregnant 
    women and infants eligible under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) of the 
    Act. States may impose the premium on these individuals if their income 
    equals or exceeds 150 percent, but is not more than 185 percent, of the 
    poverty level for a family of the size involved. The amount of the 
    premium imposed may not exceed 10 percent of the amount by which the 
    family's income exceeds 150 percent of the poverty income guidelines. 
    Costs for the care of a dependent child must be deducted in determining 
    the family's income under this provision. States are prohibited from 
    requiring the prepayment of the premium. Eligibility may not be 
    terminated for failure to pay this premium unless the premium has been 
    unpaid for at least 60 days. In cases of undue hardship, as defined by 
    the State, the State may waive the payment of the premium. In addition, 
    a State may use State or local funds from other programs to pay the 
    premium. Under section 1916(c)(4) of the Act, if these funds are used, 
    they may not be counted as income to the individual for whom payment is 
    made.
        Although Congress did not specifically address the meaning of the 
    term ``costs of care for a dependent child'' (the Conference Report 
    refers to these costs as ``child care'' expenses (H. Rep. No. 495, 
    100th Cong., 1st Sess. 731 (1987)), we believe that there was no 
    Congressional intent to use a broader concept of child care costs for 
    this provision than that traditionally used under the AFDC program. 
    Therefore, we propose to define child care costs for purposes of this 
    provision as costs related to the care of a child necessary to enable a 
    member of the family whose income was included in the eligibility 
    determination to work or participate in training.
    6. Payment Levels Under AFDC
        OBRA '86 added section 1902(1)(4)(A) to the Act, which provided 
    that a State plan may not elect to cover the optional groups of low-
    income pregnant women, infants, and children up to age 5 described in 
    section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) unless the State had in effect AFDC 
    payment levels that were not less than those in effect on April 17, 
    1986. This provision became effective on April 1, 1987. OBRA '87 
    amended this provision, changing the date upon which AFDC levels would 
    be measured from April 1 to July 1, 1987. The OBRA '87 amendment was 
    effective on December 22, 1987.
        Section 302(c) of MCCA eliminated section 1902(1)(4), but placed a 
    comparable provision in a new section 1903(i)(9). This provision states 
    that payment will not be made to a State with respect to amounts for 
    medical assistance for section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) optional groups 
    if the State has in effect AFDC payment levels that are less than those 
    in effect on July 1, 1987. In addition, section 302(c) established a 
    new, more general maintenance of effort provision in section 
    1902(c)(1), which states that the Secretary will not approve any 
    Medicaid State plan if the State has in effect AFDC payment levels 
    which are less than those in effect on May 1, 1988. Because section 
    1116(b) of the Act distinguishes between plans and plan amendments, we 
    interpret this provision literally as prohibiting approval of new State 
    plans but not prohibiting approval of amendments to a State plan. The 
    MCCA provisions were effective on July 1, 1989.
        There have been some questions raised about how we would determine 
    if the AFDC payment level has been maintained by a State as specified 
    in the law. ``Payment level'' is not an existing term used under AFDC. 
    However, for the purposes of sections 1902(c) and 1903(i)(9), payment 
    levels are the amounts of the payments for basic needs (according to 
    family size) which would be made to families with no income under the 
    approved State AFDC plan. Special needs are not included, as we have 
    concluded, based on a review of statutory history, that Congress 
    intended to include only basic needs. Thus, we propose to find a State 
    has not reduced its payment level if it has not reduced the amount of 
    the AFDC payment for basic needs made to a family with no other income.
    7. Application for AFDC
        Section 4104(e) of OBRA '87 amended section 1902(1)(4) of the Act 
    by adding a new paragraph (C) to specify that a State Medicaid plan may 
    not provide that any of the low-income pregnant women, infants, and 
    children under section 1902(1) must apply for AFDC as a condition of 
    applying for or receiving Medicaid. Section 302(c) of MCCA made further 
    amendments by removing section 1902(1)(4) and adding a comparable 
    provision to section 1902(c)(2) of the Act. Section 1902(c)(2) provides 
    that the Secretary must not approve any State plan for Medicaid if the 
    State requires low-income pregnant women, infants, and children under 
    section 1902(1)(1) to apply for AFDC benefits as a condition of 
    applying for or receiving Medicaid.
    8. Need for Regulations
        The statutory amendments discussed above are effective without 
    regard to whether final regulations to carry them out have been 
    published by the applicable effective dates. However, changes in the 
    Medicaid regulations are necessary to bring the regulations up to date 
    with current statutory requirements.
    9. Proposed Regulations
        We propose to amend the Medicaid regulations under 42 CFR parts 
    435, 436, 440, and 447 as follows:
         Add a new Sec. 435.118 to specify the mandatory 
    eligibility groups of pregnant women, infants under age 1, children age 
    1 up to age 6 with incomes at or below 133 percent of the Federal 
    poverty income guidelines, and children age 6 up to age 19 with incomes 
    at or below 100 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines.
         Add Sec. 435.228 to specify the optional eligibility 
    groups of low-income pregnant women and infants (and low-income 
    children in American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands) and 
    Sec. 436.226 to specify the optional eligibility groups of low-income 
    pregnant women, infants, and children and the conditions under which 
    they may establish eligibility.
         Add Secs. 435.612 and 436.612 to incorporate the 
    requirements for a State to establish income standards, and at State 
    option, resource standards for these low-income groups and for applying 
    methodologies to determine financial eligibility.
         Revise Secs. 435.608 and 436.608 to specify that the State 
    agency must not require low-income pregnant women, infants, and 
    children to apply for AFDC benefits as a condition of applying for or 
    receiving Medicaid.
         Add a new Sec. 431.60 to specify the maintenance of 
    specified AFDC payment levels as a condition of State plan approval. 
    Revise Secs. 435.1002 and 436.1002 to specify that FFP is not available 
    for expenditures for Medicaid for optional groups of low-income 
    pregnant women and infants covered under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) 
    if the State has in effect AFDC payment levels that are less than the 
    payment levels in effect under the plan on July 1, 1987.
         Revise Sec. 440.250 on limits on comparability of services 
    to provide that services to pregnant women in the mandatory and 
    optional categorically needy low-income eligibility groups are limited 
    to services related to pregnancy (including prenatal, delivery, family 
    planning, and postpartum services) and to other conditions which may 
    complicate pregnancy that are included under the approved State plan.
         Add a new Sec. 447.60 to specify the requirements and 
    conditions for imposing a monthly premium on the optional eligibility 
    groups of low-income pregnant women and infants with family incomes 
    between 150 and 185 percent of the poverty level and make conforming 
    changes to Secs. 447.50 and 447.51.
        Section 303(e) of MCCA added section 1902(r)(2) of the Act, which 
    allows States to elect to use less restrictive income and resource 
    methodologies than the cash assistance methodologies for a number of 
    eligibility groups, including the mandatory and optional categorically 
    needy pregnant women, infants, and children in section 1902(l). On 
    January 19, 1993, we published in the Federal Register (58 FR 4908) 
    regulations at Secs. 435.601, 435.602, 436.601, and 436.602 to 
    interpret section 1902(r)(2). The eligibility groups of low-income 
    pregnant women, infants, and children described in this preamble are 
    subject to the provisions of Secs. 435.601, 435.602, 436.601, and 
    436.602.
    
    
        [Note: On February 19, 1993, August 23, 1993, and February 18, 
    1994, we published notices in the Federal Register (58 FR 9120; 58 
    FR 44457; and 59 FR 8138) to delay the effective dates for the 
    January 19, 1993 final rule. If, at the time we issue the final rule 
    for these proposed regulations, the January 19, 1993 final 
    regulations have been revised or are not in effect, we will make 
    appropriate revisions.]
    
    
    We propose to add new Secs. 435.612 and 436.612 to specify the 
    requirements for establishing the income and resource standards for 
    these groups and to cross-refer to Secs. 435.601, 435.602, 436.601, and 
    436.602 for the methodologies to be used for determining financial 
    eligibility. The group of low-income aged and disabled individuals 
    discussed in section I.F. of this document also is subject to 
    Secs. 435.601, 435.602, 436.601 and 436.602.
    
    B. Continuous Eligibility of Pregnant Women
    
        Under section 1902(e)(6) of the Act, as added by section 9401(d) of 
    OBRA '86 and amended by section 4101(e)(2) of OBRA '87, section 302(e) 
    of MCCA, and section 4603 of OBRA '90, States must treat any pregnant 
    women who are eligible under section 1902(a)(10) as continuously 
    eligible throughout the pregnancy and the postpartum period without 
    regard to changes in income.
        Section 9401(d) of OBRA '86 added section 1902(e)(6) to the Act. 
    Section 1902(e)(6) allowed States to treat any women who were described 
    in sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) and 1902(1) as continuously eligible 
    during the pregnancy and through a 60-day postpartum period, without 
    regard to any changes in family income. Women covered under this 
    provision consisted of two groups: low-income pregnant women and low-
    income women during the 60-day period after the pregnancy ends. 
    Therefore, this provision covered women who applied for and became 
    Medicaid eligible under section 1902(l) either before or after giving 
    birth. Section 4101(e)(2) of OBRA '87 redefined the section 1902(e)(6) 
    postpartum period to specify that the period of continued coverage 
    extends for 60 days after the pregnancy ends, beginning on the last day 
    of pregnancy, plus any remaining days in the month in which the 60th 
    day occurs. The remaining days in the month provision was added by OBRA 
    '87 for Federal matching payment and quality control purposes because, 
    in some States, Medicaid eligibility is not terminated at any time 
    other than the end of the month.
        Section 302(e) of MCCA amended section 1902(e)(6) of the Act to 
    provide States with the option of treating any pregnant woman who has 
    established eligibility under any eligibility group listed in section 
    1902(a)(10) and who, because of a change in income, would cease to be 
    eligible, as a mandatory eligible low-income pregnant woman throughout 
    the pregnancy and for the specified postpartum period, without regard 
    to changes in family income. Section 1902(e)(6) now refers to 
    ``pregnant women'' rather than ``women described in section 
    1902(l)(1).'' As a result, we believe it still covers the pregnant 
    women described in section 1902(l)(1)(A) but no longer includes those 
    women in section 1902(l)(1)(A) who first become eligible only in the 
    60-day postpartum period after they have ceased to be ``pregnant 
    women.''
        Section 4603(a)(2) of OBRA '90 further amended section 1902(e)(6) 
    to require States to provide continuous coverage to any pregnant woman 
    eligible under section 1902(a)(10) of the Act who would otherwise lose 
    her eligibility due to a change in income. The pregnant woman must be 
    ``deemed to continue to be'' a mandatory categorically needy individual 
    described under sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and 1902(1)(1)(A) 
    through the end of the postpartum period. The OBRA '90 amendment also 
    stated that this mandatory coverage would not apply in the case of a 
    woman who has received ambulatory prenatal care under section 1920 of 
    the Act during a presumptive eligibility period and is then determined 
    to be ineligible for regular Medicaid.
        Although section 1902(e)(6) purports to cover all pregnant women 
    who, because of a change in family income, would not otherwise continue 
    to be eligible for Medicaid, we believe that it does not automatically 
    cover all pregnant women who must meet a spenddown. Most pregnant women 
    seeking to meet a spenddown would be attempting to establish 
    eligibility as medically needy. Section 1902(e)(6) now requires that a 
    State deem a pregnant woman (who has established eligibility under any 
    eligibility group) to continue to be a pregnant woman under sections 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and 1902(1)(1)(A) if that woman would otherwise 
    cease to be eligible due to a change in income.
        A medically needy woman can establish her eligibility during a 
    given budget period by spending down her excess income. However, if she 
    has the excess income in the following budget period and is ineligible 
    because she cannot spend it down, we do not believe that her 
    ineligibility has resulted from a ``change'' in income. In fact, her 
    income is unchanged for eligibility purposes if it remains in excess of 
    the medically needy income level by the same amount as in the previous 
    budget period; she has simply not been able to spend down to the 
    medically needy income level. We believe that under the statute, a 
    medically needy pregnant woman whose family income does not change and 
    who cannot meet her spenddown does not qualify as having the ``change'' 
    in income contemplated by section 1902(e)(6).
        We are uncertain how to apply section 1902(e)(6) in the context of 
    pregnant women who have a spenddown, and whose family incomes increase, 
    causing this spenddown amount to increase. We propose to cover under 
    this provision any pregnant woman who was eligible (either as 
    categorically needy, medically needy without a spenddown, or medically 
    needy after meeting a spenddown) at any time during her pregnancy, who 
    then experiences a change in family income which either would cause her 
    to lose categorically needy Medicaid, medically needy Medicaid without 
    a spenddown, or to lose eligibility (be unable to meet the increased 
    spenddown although she would have met the earlier spenddown) by virtue 
    of an increased spenddown amount.
        We would interpret section 1902(e)(6) so that it will not relieve 
    pregnant women who qualify under section 1902(e)(6) of their obligation 
    to satisfy their original spenddown amount in each budget period while 
    in section 1902(e)(6) status.
        If a pregnant woman who has in the previous budget period met a 
    spenddown has an increase in income and qualifies under section 
    1902(e)(6), she must be ``deemed to continue to be'' a pregnant woman 
    under sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV) and 1902(1)(1)(A). These 
    provisions describe categorically needy eligibility groups with respect 
    to whom the limited Medicaid benefit is available. We believe that the 
    phrase ``deemed to continue to be'' is ambiguous. The phrase can mean 
    that the woman is to be regarded for all purposes as if she were 
    actually categorically needy, or only that she is to be considered as 
    categorically needy for the purpose of receiving the restricted service 
    package that applies to pregnant women described in section 1902(1) 
    without regard to the change in her family's income. If we were to 
    regard the woman as though she were actually categorically needy, she 
    would no longer have to meet any spenddown, and any subsequent changes 
    of income would not affect her eligibility. This would place the 
    medically needy pregnant woman whose income has increased in a better 
    position than any other medically needy pregnant woman with a spenddown 
    who has had no increase in income.
        In order to avoid the anomalous result of only pregnant women with 
    higher incomes being relieved of their total spenddown obligations, we 
    propose not to interpret section 1902(e)(6) as requiring that a 
    medically needy woman be considered as though she were categorically 
    needy for all purposes. We propose instead to interpret the phrase 
    ``deemed to continue to be'' in section 1902(e)(6) to require only that 
    a woman who meets her original spenddown amount, but cannot meet the 
    increased amount, be deemed to be eligible for the limited service 
    package provided to the section 1902(1) pregnant women. The woman can 
    maintain this deemed status without having to pay any increased 
    spenddown amounts which result from increases in family income. She 
    will, however, be required to continue to meet her original spenddown 
    while in section 1902(e)(6) status.
        We propose to revise redesignated Sec. 435.918 relating to 
    redetermination of eligibility, to provide that the agency must 
    consider a pregnant woman eligible under any Medicaid eligibility group 
    as an individual who is eligible to receive the services available to 
    the mandatory categorically needy low-income group throughout the 
    pregnancy and for the specific postpartum period after the pregnancy 
    ends without regard to changes in the family income.
    
    C. Qualified Children
    
        Section 4601(a)(2) of OBRA '90 amended the definition of a 
    qualified child in section 1905(n)(2) of the Act, effective July 1, 
    1991. Under section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(III) of the Act, a State must 
    provide Medicaid coverage to the mandatory group of qualified children. 
    Effective July 1, 1991, under the new definition of qualified child 
    added by OBRA '90, a State must provide Medicaid coverage to children 
    under the age of 19 who were born after September 30, 1983, and who 
    meet the income and resource requirements of the State plan under title 
    IV-A. The option in section 1905(n)(2) for a State to include as 
    qualified children those children born after an earlier date than 
    September 30, 1983 (as chosen by the State) was retained. As a result, 
    effective July 1, 1991, States have the option to provide Medicaid 
    coverage to children under the age of 19 who were born after any date 
    prior to September 30, 1983 (as chosen by the State) who meet the 
    income and resource requirements of title IV-A.
        We propose to amend Sec. 435.116(c) to raise the maximum age of a 
    qualified child to under age 19.
    
    D. Deemed Newborn Eligibility
    
    1. OBRA '90 Changes
        Section 4603(a) of OBRA '90 changed the requirements in section 
    1902(e)(4) of the Act under which a newborn child remains eligible for 
    Medicaid, effective January 1, 1991. Prior to this change, States were 
    only required to continue the eligibility of an infant deemed eligible 
    at birth for so long as the infant remained a member of the mother's 
    household and the mother remained eligible for Medicaid. States must 
    now also continue the eligibility of an infant deemed eligible at birth 
    if the infant remains a member of the mother's household and the mother 
    loses Medicaid eligibility but would remain eligible if pregnant.
        We considered whether the language ``remain eligible if pregnant'' 
    meant that the mother should be considered as newly pregnant in each 
    month after the postpartum period. Under this interpretation, if the 
    mother was regarded as reapplying for Medicaid after the postpartum 
    period as though she were newly pregnant, her income might be too high 
    for her to be eligible, even under the pregnancy-related eligibility 
    categories. (For example, the mother's income may have increased above 
    the applicable standard during the pregnancy but she remained eligible 
    through the postpartum period by virtue of section 1902(e)(6) of the 
    Act.) If she is regarded as newly pregnant, she would not receive the 
    continued coverage under section 1902(e)(6) for women whose incomes 
    increase after they are already eligible and pregnant. As a result, the 
    mother would not be ``eligible'' even if she were considered to be 
    pregnant and the infant would lose eligibility under section 
    1902(e)(4).
        We decided that a better reading of the provision would be to 
    consider a mother as if she had not yet given birth; that is, as if she 
    had remained continuously pregnant. A discussion of this provision in 
    the House Report of the Committee on Budget to accompany H.R. 5835 (H. 
    Rep. No. 881, 101st Cong., 2d. Sess. 103 (1990)) refers to the woman 
    remaining eligible for Medicaid or one who ``would be eligible for 
    Medicaid were she still pregnant,'' which implies she should be treated 
    as if she had not given birth. Therefore, we propose to require States 
    to continue the eligibility of an infant deemed eligible at birth who 
    is in his or her mother's household and whose mother would still be 
    eligible for Medicaid if the infant had not yet been born. Under this 
    interpretation, changes in the mother's income will have no impact on 
    the infant's eligibility because were the mother still pregnant, she 
    would remain eligible without regard to changes in income by virtue of 
    section 1902(e)(6) of the Act. A redetermination of the mother's 
    eligibility is not required at the end of the postpartum period unless 
    information is received that there has been a change in the mother's 
    circumstances which might have affected her eligibility even if she 
    were still pregnant and the infant had not yet been born.
    2. Member of the Mother's Household
        An infant must continue to be a member of his/her mother's 
    household to maintain deemed newborn eligibility. We are codifying 
    existing policy related to determinations of whether an infant is a 
    member of his or her mother's household. An infant is considered a 
    member of his or her mother's household as long as he or she is 
    continuously hospitalized after birth, unless the mother has legally 
    relinquished control of the child or the State has established that she 
    has abandoned the child. After the infant's release from the hospital, 
    or in situations not involving hospitalization, States must apply the 
    AFDC rules for determining whether a child is living with a specified 
    relative to determine if an infant (who is not an SSI recipient) is a 
    member of his or her mother's household.
    
    E. Inpatient Services to Infants and Children
    
        Under section 1902(e)(7) of the Act, as added by OBRA '86 and 
    amended by section 4101(b) of OBRA '87, section 302(e)(2) of MCCA, and 
    section 6401 of OBRA '89, States must extend Medicaid eligibility to a 
    low-income infant or child described in section 1902(l) of the Act or a 
    qualified child described in section 1905(n)(2) of the Act who is 
    receiving covered inpatient services in a hospital or a long-term care 
    facility on the date he or she attains the maximum age for Medicaid 
    eligibility under the State plan until the end of the inpatient stay if 
    the child or infant remains eligible, except that he or she has 
    attained that maximum age. This provision applies to the mandatory and 
    optional categorically needy eligibility groups of low-income infants 
    and children described under section 1902(l) of the Act. Section 6401 
    of OBRA '89 extended this provision to the new mandatory categorically 
    needy group of low-income children age 1 up to age 6 under section 
    1902(l)(1)(C) and section 4601 of OBRA '90 (by changes to section 
    1902(l)(1)(D)) to the new mandatory categorically needy group of 
    children born after September 30, 1983 who have not attained age 19 
    also. (In addition, section 302(b) of MCCA further clarified this 
    provision by adding in the matter after paragraph (F) of section 
    1902(a)(10) a new paragraph (X) to provide that States that impose 
    durational limits on payments for inpatient hospital services must 
    establish exceptions to these limits for medically necessary inpatient 
    services received by an infant up to age 1 in a hospital designated as 
    a disproportionate share hospital under the State's Medicaid plan. 
    Regulations to interpret section 302(b) of MCCA are included in a 
    separate document that is under development.)
        We propose to amend Secs. 435.520 and 436.520 to require State 
    agencies to extend Medicaid eligibility to a low- income infant or 
    child described in section 1902(1) of the Act and a qualified child 
    described in section 1905(n)(2) of the Act who are receiving covered 
    inpatient services on the date they attain the maximum age for Medicaid 
    eligibility under the State plan until the end of the inpatient stay if 
    the infant or child remains eligible except for attainment of the 
    maximum age; and make conforming changes to Secs. 435.500 and 436.500.
    
    F. Low-Income Aged and Disabled Individuals
    
        Section 9402 of OBRA '86 amended the Social Security Act by adding 
    new sections 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(X) and 1902(m) to establish an optional 
    categorically needy eligibility group of aged and disabled individuals 
    with incomes at or below the Federal poverty income level. Section 
    1902(m) of the Act, as added by OBRA '86 and amended by section 
    4118(p)(8) of OBRA '87 and section 301(e) of MCCA, describes 
    individuals in this group as those who are 65 years of age or older or 
    are disabled as determined under SSI, whose income does not exceed a 
    standard established by the State that is set at a percentage (at or 
    below 100 percent) of the Federal poverty income level, and whose 
    resources do not exceed the maximum amount of resources allowed under 
    SSI. If a State has a medically needy program with a more generous 
    resource level, section 1902(m)(2)(B) allows a State to elect to use 
    the medically needy resource level instead of the SSI resource level.
        Between July 1, 1987 and June 30, 1989, States were permitted to 
    provide eligibility to this optional group of low-income aged and 
    disabled individuals only if they also provided Medicaid eligibility to 
    the low-income group of pregnant women and infants under the provisions 
    of section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) as added by section 9401 of OBRA '86 
    discussed earlier. Section 301(e)(2)(D) of MCCA removed the condition 
    for providing eligibility to both groups, effective July 1, 1989.
        Income eligibility for this optional group of aged and disabled 
    individuals is based on a standard established at a level that is at or 
    below 100 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family 
    of the size involved. The term ``family of the size involved,'' as used 
    in section 1902(m)(2)(A), is not specifically defined in the statute. 
    However, for this optional group of aged and disabled we believe that 
    it would be appropriate to adopt for individuals and couples who seek 
    eligibility under section 1902(m) of the Act the SSI program's 
    distinction between eligible individuals and eligible couples, 
    depending on whether the individual alone is eligible or both members 
    of the couple are eligible under section 1902(m). Since the statute 
    requires that income be determined using the principles of section 
    1612, which are SSI program rules, using SSI's individual and couple 
    distinction as well as SSI's deeming rules enables States to have a 
    clear understanding of the baseline for determining eligibility for 
    members of this poverty level-related group. It also avoids potential 
    conflicts with section 1902(a)(17)(D) of the Act, which could result if 
    eligibility for this group were determined by pooling family income (if 
    the family included individuals other than a husband and wife).
        The SSI program determines eligibility for couples, or for 
    individuals. If the SSI definition of a couple (i.e., the couple is 
    married and they qualify for SSI benefits as an eligible couple) is not 
    met, eligibility is determined on an individual basis. We propose to 
    apply this principle to determine eligibility for the optional Medicaid 
    aged and disabled group. If two individuals are married and are both 
    eligible under section 1902(m), both spouses will be considered a 
    couple even if only one spouse applied for medical assistance and their 
    income will be compared to the Federal poverty level for a family of 
    two. If both individuals in a family are not eligible as a couple under 
    section 1902(m), their eligibility will be determined as individuals, 
    with their incomes being compared to the poverty level for an 
    individual, and deeming of income and resources from responsible family 
    members using SSI deeming methodologies.
        Section 1902(m) of the Act has always specified that resources of 
    individuals under the low-income optional categorically needy group of 
    aged and disabled individuals may not exceed the SSI limits, and that 
    SSI methodologies must be used to determine countable income and 
    resources. However, section 1902(r)(2) of the Act, as added by section 
    303(e) of MCCA, does permit States, at their option, to use less 
    restrictive requirements than SSI for optional categorically needy 
    groups. However, in spite of section 1902(r)(2), we do not believe that 
    States are authorized to allow individuals to deduct (spend down) the 
    costs incurred for medical care or any other type of remedial care from 
    income in order to meet the income standard established, except as they 
    are permitted to do so under SSI if the individual is a severely 
    disabled person who works. This is because section 1902(m)(3)(B) of the 
    Act specifically prohibits the use of an income spenddown, except in 
    the case of individuals covered by section 1612(b)(4)(B)(ii) of the 
    Act. Under this exception, a severely disabled individual who works is 
    allowed to deduct from income the reasonable costs for attendant care 
    services, medical devices, equipment, prostheses, and similar items and 
    services (generally not including routine drugs or routine medical 
    services) that are necessary in order for the individual to work.
        Section 6411(a) of OBRA '89 amended section 1902(f) of the Act to 
    eliminate the option to use more restrictive eligibility criteria than 
    are used by the SSI program for certain eligibility groups. One of 
    those groups is the optional low-income aged and disabled group. 
    Therefore, section 1902(f) States that elect to cover the section 
    1902(m) group must use SSI eligibility methodologies, and the 
    statutorily mandated income and resource standards, in determining 
    eligibility for individuals under this group. The only exception is 
    that section 1902(f) States can use more liberal criteria under section 
    1902(r)(2). (Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands would use the 
    SSI disability definition under section 1614 of the Act and the 
    methodologies for determining income and resource eligibility applied 
    under sections 1612 and 1613, or less restrictive income and resource 
    methodologies under section 1902(r)(2), as appropriate. This is because 
    the reference in section 1902(m) relating to disability and financial 
    methodologies is to those of title XVI (that is, SSI) and not to those 
    of the State plan program under title XVI.)
        Section 4501(e)(1) of OBRA '90 amended section 1905(p)(2) of the 
    Act by adding paragraph (D) to provide that, in determining income 
    eligibility for qualified Medicare beneficiaries (QMBs) who are 
    entitled to monthly title II insurance benefits, any cost-of-living 
    adjustment (COLA) in these title II benefits received beginning in 
    December of the preceding year must be disregarded. We will issue a 
    separate regulation incorporating this provision for QMBs. Section 
    4501(e)(2) of OBRA '90 made this rule also apply to the income 
    eligibility determinations of the aged and disabled individuals covered 
    by section 1902(m).
        The disregard applies to all the months from the month the COLA 
    increase is effective through the month after the month the revised 
    poverty levels are published each year. Since the new poverty levels 
    are usually published in February, the disregard normally will be 
    effective through March of each year.
        However, for Medicaid purposes, the new poverty levels are 
    effective upon publication. This means that, for the period between 
    publication of the poverty levels (usually mid-February) and the end of 
    the disregard period (usually March), the disregard of the COLA 
    increase and the poverty level increase would overlap. As a result of 
    this overlap, some individuals would meet the income level for this 
    group because the COLA disregard would lower their countable income at 
    the same time that the revised poverty level would allow for higher 
    income. As soon as the COLA disregard expired, these individuals would 
    lose eligibility again.
        We believe that this approach would create an unreasonable 
    administrative burden for States. They would have to add these 
    individuals to the Medicaid rolls, only to have to remove them again a 
    few weeks later. We also believe that the intent of the statutory 
    provision is to protect individuals who would lose that status for a 
    few weeks because of the COLA increase (but only until the increase in 
    the poverty level took effect), and not to permit other individuals to 
    achieve eligibility status for a few weeks.
        For these reasons, we are proposing to make the revised poverty 
    levels effective for title II recipients with the month after the last 
    month in which the COLA disregard is effective. Since the COLA 
    disregard normally expires at the end of March, in most years, the new 
    poverty levels would be effective for these individuals on April 1. By 
    delaying the effective date of the increased poverty level so that it 
    coincides with the date on which the COLA increase is first counted, we 
    would eliminate the problem discussed above.
        Section 9402 of OBRA '86 does not require or permit the different 
    treatment of income and resources allowed for this low-income aged and 
    disabled eligibility group to be applied to other Medicaid eligibility 
    groups because of the comparability provisions of section 1902(a)(17) 
    of the Act. In addition, we propose to require that if a State elects 
    to provide Medicaid eligibility to this low-income group, it must cover 
    both the aged and disabled and must apply the same income and resource 
    standards to both groups and to all family sizes involved. This 
    requirement is consistent with the intent of Congress, as expressed in 
    the language of the House Committee Report accompanying OBRA '86 (H. 
    Rep. 727, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. 103 (1986)).
        Medicaid services provided to the optional group of low-income aged 
    and disabled individuals must be the same in amount, duration, and 
    scope as the Medicaid services provided to other categorically needy 
    individuals under the approved State Medicaid plan.
        The amendments made by section 9402 of OBRA '86 apply to payments 
    to States for services for calendar quarters beginning on or after July 
    1, 1987, without regard to whether or not final regulations to carry 
    them out have been published by that date.
        We propose to incorporate the provisions of sections 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(X) and 1902(m) of the Act and section 9402 of OBRA 
    '86 in the Medicaid regulations by adding Sec. 435.238 (Sec. 436.235 
    for the Territories) to specify the optional categorically needy 
    eligibility group of aged and disabled individuals with incomes at or 
    below Federal poverty income guidelines and the conditions under which 
    they may establish eligibility. We also propose to add a new 
    Secs. 435.615 and 436.615 to specify the requirements for establishing 
    the income and resource standards and methodologies for this group and 
    for determining financial eligibility.
    
    G. Presumptive Eligibility for Pregnant Women
    
        Section 9407 of OBRA '86 added a new section 1902(a)(47) to the 
    Act, redesignated section 1920 as section 1921, and added a new section 
    1920 to allow States to provide ambulatory prenatal care to certain 
    needy pregnant women to help ensure that these women receive health 
    care early in pregnancy. Section 411(k)(16)(B) of the MCCA and section 
    4605 of OBRA '90 amended section 1920. Under section 1920, ambulatory 
    prenatal care is available during a presumptive eligibility period on 
    the basis of income eligibility only before a woman is formally 
    determined to be eligible or ineligible for Medicaid and for a 
    specified number of days while a woman is waiting for a Medicaid 
    eligibility determination. Under the statutory provisions, a qualified 
    provider, who is defined in section 1920(b)(2), determines whether a 
    pregnant woman is presumptively eligible for Medicaid. These qualified 
    providers make the presumptive eligibility determination on the basis 
    of preliminary information about the pregnant woman's family income. 
    The qualified provider determines whether the pregnant woman's family 
    income appears to meet the income criteria applied to any of the 
    eligibility groups specified in the approved State Medicaid plan under 
    which the pregnant woman might be eligible. At the time of the 
    determination, a qualified provider must refer a pregnant woman to the 
    Medicaid agency. The qualified provider must also assist a pregnant 
    woman in completing and filing an application for full Medicaid 
    services if she wishes to apply for Medicaid at that time. The Medicaid 
    agency then would establish whether or not she is eligible for regular 
    Medicaid.
        Any provider that is eligible for payment under the State plan for 
    services which the State considers to be ambulatory prenatal care can 
    furnish these services to presumptively eligible pregnant women during 
    the presumptive period. (We note that the purpose of presumptive 
    eligibility is to provide temporary, limited coverage to pregnant women 
    who are likely to be eligible for Medicaid. Under section 1905(a) of 
    the Act, individuals who are inmates in public institutions are 
    ineligible for Medicaid. Therefore, because she is not ``likely to be 
    eligible for Medicaid,'' any pregnant woman who is an inmate in a 
    public institution could not be determined presumptively eligible for 
    Medicaid and receive ambulatory prenatal care under section 1920 of the 
    Act.)
        In accordance with section 1920(b)(1), as added by OBRA '86 and 
    amended by section 4605 of OBRA '90, the presumptive period of 
    eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care begins on the day a qualified 
    provider makes a presumptive eligibility determination. The pregnant 
    woman then has until the last calendar day of the month following the 
    month in which the presumptive eligibility determination was made to 
    file a regular Medicaid application with the Medicaid agency. If she 
    does not file a regular Medicaid application by that last day, 
    presumptive eligibility ends on that last day. If she files a regular 
    Medicaid application, presumptive eligibility under section 1920 ends 
    on the date a decision is made on the regular Medicaid application.
        We are proposing to allow only one presumptive eligibility period 
    for any one pregnancy. We believe that this limitation is consistent 
    with the intent of Congress as evidenced in the language of the Senate 
    Committee Report on OBRA '86 (S. Rep. 348, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. 153 
    (1986)). In explaining the provision, the Committee stated that under 
    the presumptive eligibility program, States may ``for any one 
    pregnancy, grant presumptive eligibility for a period not to exceed * * 
    *'' (emphasis added). Congress' use of the underscored phrases leads to 
    the conclusion that only one presumptive period was intended. We 
    solicit comments on the proposed policy to allow only one presumptive 
    eligibility period per pregnancy.
        The new section 1920 specifies that a presumptive eligibility 
    determination is to be made if the pregnant woman appears to the 
    qualified provider, on the basis of preliminary information supplied by 
    her on family income, to meet the applicable income level of 
    eligibility only. Resources and other Medicaid eligibility requirements 
    that would be considered under the approved State plan if the woman 
    were to apply for regular Medicaid benefits are not considered in 
    making the presumptive eligibility determination. In addition, section 
    1920 provides that a determination of presumptive eligibility be based 
    on ``preliminary information'' about family income. Therefore, a 
    qualified provider may only request information that is correct based 
    upon a pregnant woman's best information and belief and may not require 
    exact information under a penalty of perjury. A State may require that 
    women reveal what their incomes are or only that their incomes are 
    below the applicable level.
        In implementing the provisions of section 1920 that specify that 
    presumptive eligibility determinations must be based on family income, 
    we would require the qualified provider in all cases to apply to the 
    woman's gross family income the highest, most advantageous income 
    criteria applicable to the pregnant woman under the approved plan. The 
    ``applicable'' level would usually be the higher of either the poverty 
    level standard or the medically needy income level (without spenddown). 
    This means that income disregards are not considered, and in the case 
    of blind or disabled individuals in section 1902(f) States, or in 
    States that have a medically needy program, the cost of incurred 
    medical expenses could not be deducted in order to reduce income to the 
    allowed income level (spending down). Consideration of disregards and 
    incurred medical expenses would allow some women to have income above 
    the ``applicable level'' specified in section 1920(b)(1)(A). We believe 
    Congress intended by the use of the term ``applicable level'' to 
    require qualified providers only to make simple calculations and not 
    complicated adjustments of income such as those involved in applying 
    spenddown rules or in disregarding certain types of income. To impose 
    detailed calculations and complicated adjustments on providers would be 
    administratively burdensome and contrary to efficient administration 
    because of the short-term nature of the presumptive eligibility status 
    and because no other eligibility requirements (not even resources) are 
    considered. We believe that we are not imposing an undue hardship on a 
    pregnant woman by not allowing spenddown or not disregarding certain 
    income. If the provider makes a decision that the woman does not 
    ``appear'' to meet the income criteria, the pregnant woman still has 
    the right to apply for regular Medicaid within a reasonable period of 
    time and have a formal eligibility determination made. Under a formal 
    eligibility determination, the agency may find that the pregnant woman 
    is retroactively eligible for regular Medicaid during the presumptive 
    period under the authority of section 1902(a)(34) of the Act.
        Section 1920(b)(2) of the Act, as added by OBRA '86 and amended by 
    section 411(k)(16) of MCCA, specifies the qualifications that a 
    provider must meet in order to be allowed to make presumptive 
    eligibility determinations. The provider must--
        (1) Be eligible to receive payments under Medicaid;
        (2) Be an entity that provides services of the following type: 
    outpatient hospital services as specified in section 1905(a)(2)(A) of 
    the Act or rural health clinic services and any other ambulatory 
    services offered by a rural health clinic and otherwise included in the 
    plan as described in section 1905(a)(2)(B); or be an entity that 
    provides clinic services by or under the direction of a physician 
    described in section 1905(a)(9) of the Act;
        (3) Be determined by the State agency to be capable of making 
    presumptive eligibility determinations on the basis of preliminary 
    information on family income; and
        (4) Meet one of the following conditions:
    
    --Be receiving funding from the migrant health centers or community 
    health centers programs under sections 329, 330, or 340 of the Public 
    Health Service Act; funding from the maternal and child health services 
    block grant program under title V of the Social Security Act; or 
    funding under title V of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.
    --Be participating in the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, 
    Infants, and Children established under section 17 of the Child 
    Nutrition Act of 1966, or in the Commodity Supplemental Food Program 
    established under section 4(a) of the Agriculture and Consumer 
    Protection Act of 1973.
    --Be participating in a State perinatal program.
    --Be the Indian Health Service or a health program or facility operated 
    by a tribe or tribal organization under the Indian Self-Determination 
    Act (Pub. L. 93-638).
    
        All providers who meet the criteria listed above must be considered 
    qualified providers. Therefore, if a State determines that a provider 
    is not capable of making presumptive eligibility determinations for 
    pregnant women, that provider would not be considered ``qualified'' to 
    make these determinations. We would permit States to exclude a provider 
    that is qualified only under very narrow circumstances; that is, if a 
    State can demonstrate that there is good cause to exclude the provider. 
    In addition, we wish to give States maximum flexibility in meeting the 
    needs of pregnant women and, therefore, propose to allow States to 
    determine whether a program is a ``State perinatal program.''
        In interpreting the provisions of section 1920(b), we would require 
    States to provide qualified providers with proper screening forms for 
    pregnant women to request a decision of presumptive eligibility. We 
    also would require the States to provide instructions to qualified 
    providers on how to apply the gross income criteria under the various 
    eligibility groups under the State's approved Medicaid plan and how to 
    determine the highest income criteria group under which the pregnant 
    woman is most likely to be eligible if she applies for regular 
    Medicaid. We are not prescribing the specific content and format of the 
    screening forms or instructions. However, we expect State instructions 
    to be in enough detail to allow a qualified provider (based on 
    preliminary information provided by a pregnant woman) to make 
    reasonably accurate income eligibility determinations.
        In accordance with section 1920(c)(1), we would require State 
    agencies to furnish qualified providers with regular Medicaid 
    application forms and train them to assist pregnant women who wish to 
    apply in completing and filing these forms. As provided by section 
    1920(c)(3) of the Act as amended by section 4605 of OBRA '90, the 
    application provided may be an application developed by the State for 
    use by pregnant women who wish to apply as low-income pregnant women 
    described in section 1902(l)(1)(A) of the Act.
        Section 1920(c)(3) of the Act seems to contemplate an application 
    for regular Medicaid that is separate from the screening form for 
    presumptive eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care. We believe the 
    presumptive eligibility screening form and the regular Medicaid 
    application can be combined. However, pregnant women cannot be required 
    to provide all of the information necessary for a full-scale Medicaid 
    application when applying for only presumptive eligibility. If the 
    forms are combined, a State agency can offer the pregnant woman the 
    option to complete the entire application but cannot require that she 
    do so in order to establish presumptive eligibility. A qualified 
    provider must make a presumptive eligibility determination once a 
    pregnant woman has provided information about her family income and 
    cannot require additional information.
        A presumptive eligibility screening form alone cannot be used to 
    establish a filing date for a regular Medicaid application. If a 
    combined presumptive eligibility screening form and Medicaid 
    application is used and the woman chooses to complete the entire 
    application, the completed application form must be forwarded promptly 
    to the appropriate State agency for a decision on regular Medicaid 
    eligibility under the plan once the qualified provider makes a decision 
    on presumptive eligibility. In this situation, the date the completed 
    form is received by the State agency is the Medicaid filing date for 
    Medicaid eligibility. If the woman is determined to be eligible, this 
    date will determine the beginning of the period in which she qualifies 
    for the more extensive services under the plan and will establish the 
    month used to determine the dates of the 3 months of retroactive 
    eligibility, if the woman would have been eligible during the 
    retroactive period. Under this latter approach, pregnant women would 
    not be required to file another application. However, they would not be 
    exempt from meeting with State agency staff as appropriate or from 
    providing additional information necessary to determine eligibility 
    under the plan.
        A modified approach under this option would be to have State agency 
    staff on site at qualified provider locations to supervise or actually 
    assist pregnant women in completing the application form. In these 
    cases, the application date for regular Medicaid plan services would be 
    the date the onsite State agency staff person receives the completed 
    form. This would result in an earlier Medicaid filing date. However, 
    even though State agency staff who are working at qualified provider 
    locations can receive and process applications for regular Medicaid, 
    they cannot make presumptive eligibility determinations unless they 
    themselves meet the definition of ``qualified provider'' under section 
    1920(b)(2).
        Since we are considering pregnant women who apply only for 
    presumptive eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care as requesting to 
    receive services under a special status (that is, not regular Medicaid 
    eligibility), we propose not to apply to a decision on presumptive 
    eligibility the notification requirements that a State must meet when 
    it makes a decision on a regular Medicaid application. Existing 
    regulations under Secs. 435.911 and 435.912 and part 431, subpart E, 
    require Medicaid agencies to notify Medicaid applicants within a 
    specified period of time of the agency's decision on a regular Medicaid 
    application, the reasons for the decision, and an explanation of rights 
    to a hearing if the application is denied. Although we propose not to 
    apply the requirements of Secs. 435.911 and 435.912 and part 431, 
    subpart E, to presumptive eligibility decisions, we are proposing to 
    require that the qualified provider inform a pregnant woman in writing 
    of the presumptive eligibility decision at the time of the 
    determination. In the case of a denial of presumptive eligibility, the 
    qualified provider would be required to inform the woman in writing of 
    the reason for the denial of this special status and of her right to 
    apply to the State agency for an eligibility decision for regular 
    Medicaid.
        In accordance with section 1920 of the Act, we propose to require 
    the qualified provider to inform, in writing, a pregnant woman who is 
    determined presumptively eligible that she is required to file a 
    regular Medicaid application by the last day of the month following the 
    month in which the presumptive determination is made if she wishes to 
    continue to receive ambulatory prenatal care after that date. The 
    qualified provider must inform the pregnant woman in writing that if 
    she does not file her application for regular Medicaid by the last day 
    of the month following the month in which she was determined 
    presumptively eligible, her presumptive eligibility will end on that 
    date. However, if she files within the deadline, she will remain 
    presumptively eligible until she has a regular Medicaid determination. 
    Under the provisions of section 1920(c)(2), the qualified provider also 
    must notify the State agency within 5 working days after the date on 
    which the provider determines that the pregnant woman is presumptively 
    eligible.
        While the procedures under Secs. 435.911 and 435.912 for notifying 
    individuals of actions on applications would not apply to presumptive 
    eligibility decisions for ambulatory prenatal care, they would apply to 
    regular Medicaid applications filed after the presumptive eligibility 
    determination is made. Because we do not consider presumptive 
    eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care to be eligibility for Medicaid 
    per se, and because termination of ambulatory prenatal care benefits 
    occurs automatically after specified time periods under section 1920 of 
    the Act, we also propose not to apply the existing provisions of the 
    regulations that require Medicaid agencies to provide timely written 
    notice of reduction or termination of Medicaid benefits and rights to 
    appeal of an adverse action (part 431, subpart E and Sec. 435.919). As 
    indicated earlier, we propose to require a qualified provider to 
    provide written notice of the date a pregnant woman can expect 
    presumptive eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care to end. However, 
    we propose not to grant rights to appeal a denial or termination of 
    ambulatory prenatal care services under a presumptive eligibility 
    decision. A presumptively eligible pregnant woman who subsequently 
    files a regular Medicaid application that is denied would have the 
    right to appeal the denial of her regular Medicaid application.
        We do not believe that we are imposing an undue burden on qualified 
    providers by requiring that notification by a qualified provider be in 
    writing. We do not foresee that this written notice will be individual 
    personal letters. We considered requiring States to supply qualified 
    providers with preprinted notices. However, we decided to allow States 
    the flexibility to determine how to best arrange for this notification 
    within each State program. We particularly solicit comments on whether 
    the requirement that notification by a qualified provider be in writing 
    imposes an undue hardship on qualified providers.
        Existing regulations at Sec. 435.914 permit States to provide 
    Medicaid for an entire month when an individual is eligible for 
    Medicaid under the plan at any time during the month. We propose not to 
    permit States to provide full month eligibility for presumptive 
    eligibility periods because by definition a presumptive determination 
    is not a determination of Medicaid eligibility but eligibility for a 
    special status. Therefore, special status eligibility begins on the 
    exact date a presumptive eligibility decision is made and ends on the 
    last day of the month following the month in which the presumptive 
    decision is made when a Medicaid application has not been filed, or on 
    the date a formal decision of Medicaid eligibility is made if an 
    application has been filed. However, full month regular Medicaid 
    eligibility is available during the approval month of a regular 
    Medicaid application in States that have elected full month coverage in 
    their approved State Medicaid plan.
        Section 9407 of OBRA '86, as amended by section 411(k)(16) of MCCA, 
    provides that, for purposes of Federal financial participation, 
    ambulatory prenatal care services that are covered under the plan, are 
    furnished by a provider that is eligible for payment under the State 
    plan, and are furnished to pregnant women during a presumptive period 
    of eligibility, will be treated as expenditures for medical assistance 
    under the State plan and thus are regarded as Medicaid plan services. 
    If the State makes any payments for ambulatory prenatal care furnished 
    by an eligible provider during the presumptive period for women who are 
    later determined to be ineligible for Medicaid, these payments will not 
    be counted in determining a State's excess erroneous payments for 
    purposes of disallowing Federal financial participation. In general, 
    Medicaid quality control will not review the accuracy of presumptive 
    eligibility determinations in terms of predicting a pregnant woman's 
    eligibility for Medicaid, and any erroneous payments made cannot be 
    counted in determining the State's erroneous payments for purposes of 
    quality control eligibility errors. However, quality control will 
    review claims for services furnished to presumptively eligible pregnant 
    women to determine whether these claims were, in fact, made for women 
    who were pregnant and were for ambulatory prenatal services covered 
    under the State plan, were furnished by a provider that is eligible to 
    receive payment under the State plan, and were furnished during a 
    period of presumptive eligibility. There will be situations in which 
    the services furnished by a qualified provider will include 
    verification of a woman's pregnancy. The services that are furnished 
    for verification will be covered as presumptive eligibility services 
    for FFP purposes only if the woman is actually pregnant. Section 1920 
    covers only ambulatory prenatal care made available to a pregnant woman 
    during a specified period. Services furnished to deliver or remove an 
    embryo/fetus from the mother or furnished following that delivery or 
    removal will not be covered as presumptive eligibility services for FFP 
    purposes. That is because, if the embryo/fetus is no longer viable, the 
    woman is no longer considered to be a pregnant woman. Also, we do not 
    believe that the services involved in delivering either a viable or 
    nonviable fetus constitute prenatal services. In addition, any services 
    furnished following removal or delivery would not be furnished to a 
    pregnant woman nor would they constitute prenatal care.
        We also expect States to monitor decisions made by specific 
    qualified providers to assure the accuracy and integrity of the 
    determinations and to take any corrective actions that may be 
    necessary. Therefore, we are proposing to require States to monitor 
    presumptive eligibility decisions.
        We propose to amend the Medicaid regulations to incorporate the 
    provisions of section 9407 of OBRA '86, section 411(k)(16) of MCCA, and 
    section 4605 of OBRA '90 as follows:
         Revise Secs. 431.864 and 431.865 to specify that excess 
    erroneous payments for purposes of disallowance of Federal financial 
    participation do not include erroneous payments for ambulatory prenatal 
    care covered under the State plan, and provided to pregnant women 
    during a presumptive eligibility period by a provider eligible for 
    Medicaid payments.
         Add Secs. 435.250 and 436.250 to specify optional coverage 
    of pregnant women during a presumptive eligibility period.
         Amend Sec. 435.907 to clarify what constitutes a formal 
    Medicaid application.
         Add a new Sec. 435.911 to specify the screening and 
    application requirements and procedures for making presumptive 
    eligibility determinations. Existing Secs. 435.911 through 435.914 
    would be redesignated as Secs. 435.914 through 435.917, respectively, 
    to allow the incorporation of the new Sec. 435.911.
         Add a new Sec. 435.912 to specify the application 
    requirements for pregnant women following the presumptive eligibility 
    determination.
         Amend Secs. 435.1001 and 436.1001 to clarify that FFP is 
    available in the necessary administrative costs the State incurs in 
    determining presumptive eligibility for pregnant women and in providing 
    ambulatory prenatal care to presumptively eligible women.
         Revise Sec. 440.1 to add the statutory basis for providing 
    ambulatory prenatal care to pregnant women during a presumptive 
    eligibility period.
         Add Sec. 440.172 to define ambulatory prenatal care and 
    qualified provider.
         Add Sec. 447.85 to specify the availability of Federal 
    financial participation for payments for ambulatory prenatal care.
    
    H. Enhancement of Pregnancy Outcomes
    
        As we have discussed earlier in two sections of this document, 
    Congress has expanded mandatory and optional Medicaid eligibility for 
    pregnant women as part of an overall effort to combat the problem of 
    infant mortality and incidences of low-birth weight through provision 
    of needed health services to low-income pregnant women. In addition, we 
    believe that we must focus State attention on the need for special 
    vigilance in cases of high-risk pregnancy in order to maximize the cost 
    effectiveness of the increased Medicaid investments. Examples of high-
    risk pregnancies include those in which the women have a complicating 
    medical condition, complications that may result from genetic factors, 
    or a history of adverse pregnancy outcomes. There is much evidence that 
    many adverse birth outcomes are preventible through timely and 
    appropriate intervention by health and social services agencies, with 
    the potential for reducing infant mortality, the use of high-cost 
    neonatal intensive care services, and the incidence of long-term care 
    services associated with extended or lifelong disabilities.
        We propose to add Sec. 435.935 to the Medicaid regulations to 
    require States to define a high-risk pregnancy, to describe the methods 
    they will apply to identify high-risk pregnant women, and to specify 
    steps that individuals, groups, and organizations involved in the 
    service delivery system will take to ensure that these women will 
    receive services designed to enhance pregnancy outcomes for both the 
    mother and the child. The purpose of defining these terms is to assist 
    States in their efforts to see that pregnant Medicaid recipients 
    receive the full range of medical and related services appropriate to 
    their risk status.
        We are proposing to impose these requirements on States under the 
    authority of sections 1902(a) (4) and (19) of the Act. These 
    provisions, respectively, require that the Medicaid State plan provide 
    for such methods of administration as are found necessary by the 
    Secretary for the proper and efficient operation of the plan, and 
    provide such safeguards as may be necessary to assure that eligibility 
    for care and services under the plan will be determined, and the care 
    and services will be provided in a manner consistent with simplicity of 
    administration and the best interests of recipients.
        We specially solicit comment on the proposal to require States to 
    target potentially high risk pregnant women. Moreover, we are 
    interested in comments on the effectiveness of a State plan amendment 
    to achieve this goal.
    
    I. Clarification of Medicaid to Homeless Individuals
    
        Section 9405 of OBRA '86 revised section 1902(b)(2) of the Act to 
    prohibit States from imposing any residence requirement that excludes 
    from Medicaid an otherwise eligible individual who resides in the 
    State, but does not maintain a residence permanently or at a fixed 
    address. Before this provision was enacted, some States were requiring 
    applicants for Medicaid to furnish a fixed address or evidence of a 
    permanent residence in order to qualify for Medicaid, even though this 
    was not a Federal requirement. In addition, section 11005 of the 
    Homeless Eligibility Clarification Act added section 1902(a)(48) to the 
    Act to require, as a State plan requirement, that States establish a 
    method for making Medicaid eligibility cards available to an eligible 
    individual who does not reside in a permanent dwelling or at a fixed 
    address. This provision was effective on January 1, 1987.
        In the interest of affording States maximum flexibility in the 
    administration of their Medicaid programs, we are not proposing to 
    impose a specific method to be used to issue Medicaid eligibility cards 
    to homeless individuals. However, the State would be required to 
    describe the method in its State plan. The method, as part of the State 
    plan, would be subject to approval by HCFA. HCFA will approve any 
    reasonable method that ensures the timely issuance of cards and receipt 
    of Medicaid and that does not impose an undue hardship on the homeless 
    individual.
        We propose to--
         Amend Secs. 435.403 and 436.403 to add the prohibition 
    against requiring otherwise eligible homeless individuals to have a 
    fixed address or reside in a permanent dwelling.
         Add a new Sec. 435.932 to specify the State plan 
    requirement that a State must establish and specify a method for 
    issuing Medicaid eligibility cards to homeless individuals.
    
    III. Response to Public Comments
    
        Because of the large volume of public comments that we usually 
    receive on notices of proposed rulemaking, we cannot acknowledge or 
    respond to them individually. However, we will address all public 
    comments received on this document in the preamble to the document in 
    which these proposed regulations are issued in final form.
    
    IV. Paperwork Burden
    
        Sections 435.612(f), 435.615(e), 435.907, 435.911, 435.918, 
    435.932, 435.935, 436.612(e), 436.615(e), 447.51, and 447.60 contain 
    information collection and reporting requirements that are subject to 
    review by the Office of Management and Budget under the requirements of 
    the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35). We have submitted 
    these proposed regulations to OMB for review. The reporting burden for 
    this collection of information is estimated to be 6 hours per response. 
    A notice will be published in the Federal Register when approval is 
    obtained. Comments regarding the burden estimate or any other aspect of 
    information collection must be addressed to the specified office 
    indicated under the ``ADDRESSES'' section of this preamble.
    
    V. Regulatory Analysis
    
        We generally prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis that is 
    consistent with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 
    through 612), unless the Secretary certifies that a proposed regulation 
    would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
    small entities. For purposes of RFA, we consider all providers and 
    suppliers of health care as small entities. Individuals and States are 
    not included in the definition of a small entity. We are not preparing 
    a RFA because we have determined, and the Secretary certifies, that 
    this proposed regulation would not have a significant economic impact 
    on a substantial number of providers and suppliers.
        Also, section 1102(b) of the Act requires the Secretary to prepare 
    a regulatory impact analysis if a proposed rule may have a significant 
    impact on the operations of a substantial number of small rural 
    hospitals. Such an analysis must conform to the provisions of section 
    603 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a 
    small rural hospital as a hospital which is located outside a 
    Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than 50 beds. We are not 
    preparing a rural hospital impact statement because we have determined, 
    and the Secretary certifies, that this proposed regulation would not 
    have a significant economic impact on the operations of a substantial 
    number of small rural hospitals.
        Although this proposed rule is not an ``economically significant'' 
    rule under Executive Order 12866, the statutory changes which are the 
    basis of this proposed rule, are substantial. We present below a 
    voluntary anaylsis of these effects.
        This proposed rule would incorporate in regulations, and in some 
    cases interpret, statutory changes that are already in effect. In cases 
    where it was necessary to provide interpretation, we have relied on the 
    legislative history of the statutory provisions, when available, for 
    the best reading of the provision. The statutory provisions are 
    effective on the statutorily established date, regardless of whether or 
    not we have issued final regulations. The statutory changes that expand 
    eligibility groups and coverage of services will increase Medicaid 
    program expenditures independently of the promulgation of this rule. 
    Costs associated with these proposed regulations are the result of 
    legislation or due to the interpretation of statutory changes already 
    in effect. Therefore, these costs have been included in the Medicaid 
    budget estimates.
        It is difficult to predict what the fiscal impact will be since 
    several provisions provide Medicaid coverage to certain groups at the 
    option of States. Another unknown factor is the additional number of 
    pregnant women, infants, and children and disabled, elderly, and 
    homeless individuals who will be offered services that previously were 
    not covered by the States and the type and cost of these specific 
    services. We know costs for States will rise as they begin to furnish 
    the additional services that will be required if medically necessary. 
    The following data reflects our estimate of medical costs attributable 
    to expansion of services under the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 
    1987, Public Law 100-203; the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 
    1988, Public Law 100-360; the Family Support Act of 1988, Public Law 
    100-485; the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989, Public Law 101-
    239; and the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, Public Law 101-
    508. The following estimates are based on data from the census, current 
    population survey, and average cost using Medicaid data:
    
                                                 Estimated Federal Costs                                            
                                                  [Dollars in millions]                                             
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Law                            Provisions                FY93       FY94       FY95        FY96  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    OBRA-86..........................  MCH*.............................       $250       $285       $325       $370
                                       eld/disab**......................        245        295        355        425
    OBRA-87..........................  MCH..............................        380        440        510        590
    OBRA-88..........................  MCH..............................        165        180        195        210
    OBRA-89..........................  MCH..............................        335        355        380        405
    OBRA-90..........................  MCH..............................        280        415        565       730 
                                                                         -------------------------------------------
        Totals.......................  .................................       1655       1970       2330      2730 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
                                                  Estimated State Costs                                             
                                                  [Dollars in millions]                                             
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Law                            Provisions                FY93       FY94       FY95       FY96   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    OBRA-86..........................  MCH*.............................       $190       $215       $245       $280
                                       eld/disab**......................        185        220        265        320
    OBRA-87..........................  MCH..............................        285        330        380        445
    OBRA-88..........................  MCH..............................        125        135        145        160
    OBRA-89..........................  MCH..............................        250        265        285        305
    OBRA-90..........................  MCH..............................        210        310        425       550 
                                                                         -------------------------------------------
        Totals.......................  .................................       1245       1475       1745      2060 
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    *MCH--Maternal/Child Health                                                                                     
    **eld/disab--elderly/disabled                                                                                   
    
        Several alternatives were considered in the development of these 
    proposed regulations and are discussed in detail earlier in the 
    preamble: Two of the more significant ones involve continuous 
    eligibility of pregnant women and deemed newborn eligibility under 
    sections II. B and II. D, respectively, of the preamble. Our proposed 
    interpretation of the statutory provisions relating to these two areas 
    would have minimal cost effects and will probably save money through 
    better management of high risk pregnancies. At most, the proposed 
    interpretation of the provision relating to continuous eligibility of 
    newborn children would cost $10 million, a very small addition to the 
    statutory costs included in the above tables. However, we believe that 
    most States have already adopted our proposed interpretation as 
    practice.
        In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this 
    proposed regulation was reviewed by the Office of Management and 
    Budget.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    42 CFR Part 431
    
        Grant programs--health, Health facilities, Medicaid, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    42 CFR Part 435
    
        Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant program--health, 
    Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
    
    42 CFR Part 436
    
        Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant programs--health, 
    Guam, Medicaid, Puerto Rico, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Virgin 
    Islands.
    
    42 CFR Part 440
    
        Grant programs--health, Medicaid.
    
    42 CFR Part 447
    
        Accounting, Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs--
    health, Health facilities, Health professions, Medicaid, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas.
    
        42 CFR chapter IV would be amended as set forth below:
    
    Subchapter C--Medical Assistance Programs
    
    PART 431--STATE ORGANIZATION AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
    
        A. Part 431 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 431 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. A new Sec. 431.60 is added to subpart B to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 431.60  Maintenance of AFDC efforts.
    
        Effective July 1, 1989, HCFA will not approve any State plan for 
    Medicaid if the State has in effect, under its approved AFDC plan, 
    payment levels (that is, the amount of the AFDC payment for basic needs 
    made to a family with no other income) that are less than its AFDC 
    payment levels in effect on May 1, 1988. However, HCFA will continue to 
    approve amendments to a State plan under these conditions.
        3. Section 431.201 is amended by revising the definition of 
    ``action'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 431.201  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Action means a termination, suspension, or reduction of Medicaid 
    eligibility or covered services. It does not include a denial of 
    presumptive eligibility for ambulatory prenatal care for a pregnant 
    woman or a termination of presumptive eligibility at the end of the 
    specified period under Sec. 435.911 of this subchapter.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 431.864, the introductory text of paragraph (b) is 
    republished and the definition of ``erroneous payments'' under 
    paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 431.864  Disallowance of Federal financial participation for 
    erroneous State payments (effective January 1, 1984 through June 30, 
    1990).
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section--
    * * * * *
        Erroneous payment means the Medicaid payment that was made for an 
    individual or family under review who--
        (1) Was ineligible for the review month or, if full month coverage 
    is not provided, at the time services were received;
        (2) Was ineligible to receive a service provided during the review 
    month; or
        (3) Had not properly met beneficiary liability prior to receiving 
    Medicaid services.
    
    Effective April 1, 1987, the term does not include erroneous payments 
    made for ambulatory prenatal care that is included in the care and 
    services covered under the State plan and furnished to pregnant women 
    by providers that are eligible to receive payments under the State plan 
    during a presumptive eligibility period as defined in 
    Sec. 435.911(e)(2) of this subchapter.
    * * * * *
        5. In Sec. 431.865, the introductory text of paragraph (b) is 
    republished and the definition of ``erroneous payments'' under 
    paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 431.865  Disallowance of Federal financial participation for 
    erroneous State payments (for annual assessment periods ending after 
    July 1, 1990).
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section--
    * * * * *
        Erroneous payment means the Medicaid payment that was made for an 
    individual or family under review who--
        (1) Was ineligible for the review month or, if full month coverage 
    is not provided, at the time services were rendered;
        (2) Was ineligible to receive a service provided during the review 
    month; or
        (3) Had not properly met beneficiary liability prior to receiving 
    Medicaid services.
    
    The term does not include erroneous payments made for ambulatory 
    prenatal care that is included in the care and services covered under 
    the State plan and furnished to pregnant women by providers that are 
    eligible to receive payments under the State plan during a presumptive 
    eligibility period as defined in Sec. 435.911(e)(2) of this subchapter.
    
    PART 435--ELIGIBILITY IN THE STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE 
    NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, AND AMERICAN SAMOA
    
        B. Part 435 is amended as follows:
        l. The authority citation for part 435 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. The heading of subpart B is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart B--Mandatory Coverage of the Categorically Needy and Special 
    Groups
    
        3. In Sec. 435.3, paragraph (a) introductory text is republished 
    and several entries are added in numerical order to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.3  Basis.
    
        (a) This part interprets the following sections of the Act and 
    public laws which state eligibility requirements and standards:
    * * * * *
        1902(c)--Conditions of State plan approval--States must maintain 
    AFDC payment levels and not require that section 1902(l) low-income 
    pregnant women, infants, and children apply for AFDC benefits.
    * * * * *
        1902(e)(6)--Mandatory continuation of Medicaid for pregnant women 
    without consideration of changes in income up to specified periods 
    after pregnancy ends.
        1902(e)(7)--Continuation of Medicaid eligibility for certain 
    infants and children receiving inpatient care.
    * * * * *
        1902(l)--Description of eligible pregnant women, infants, and 
    children with incomes related to Federal poverty income level.
        1902(m)--Description of eligible aged and disabled individuals with 
    incomes at or below Federal poverty income level.
        1902(r)(2)--Use of less restrictive income and resource 
    methodologies than those for cash assistance programs in determining 
    financial eligibility of specified categorically needy and medically 
    needy groups.
    * * * * *
        1920--Optional presumptive eligibility period for pregnant women.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 435.116, paragraph (c) introductory text is republished 
    and paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.116  Qualified pregnant women and children who are not 
    qualified family members.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) The agency must provide Medicaid to children who meet all of 
    the following criteria:
        (1) They are born after September 30, 1983, or at State option, an 
    earlier designated date;
        (2) They are under 19 years of age; and
    * * * * *
        5. Section 435.117 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.117  Newborn children.
    
        (a) The agency must provide categorically needy Medicaid 
    eligibility to a child born to a woman who is eligible as categorically 
    needy and is receiving Medicaid on the date of the child's birth. The 
    child is deemed to have applied and been found eligible for Medicaid on 
    the date of birth and remains eligible as categorically needy for one 
    year so long as the woman remains eligible or (with respect to infants 
    born on or after January 1, 1991) would have remained eligible if still 
    pregnant and the child is a member of the woman's household. If the 
    mother's basis of eligibility changes to medically needy, the child is 
    eligible as medically needy under Sec. 435.301(b)(1)(iii).
        (b) An infant is considered to be a member of his or her mother's 
    household for so long as he or she is continuously hospitalized after 
    birth, unless the mother has legally relinquished control of the child 
    or the State has established that she has abandoned the child. After 
    the infant's release from the hospital, or in situations not involving 
    hospitalization, States must apply the AFDC rules to determine if an 
    infant (who is not an SSI beneficiary) is a member of his or her 
    mother's household.
        6. The undesignated center heading ``Mandatory Coverage of Pregnant 
    Women, Children Under 8, and Newborn Children'' appearing before 
    Sec. 435.116 is revised and a new Sec. 435.118 is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    Mandatory Coverage of Pregnant Women, Children Under 19, and Newborn 
    Children
    
    
    Sec. 435.118  Pregnant women, infants, and children with family incomes 
    at a percentage of the Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) Pregnant women and infants. The agency must provide Medicaid to 
    pregnant women and women during the 60-day period beginning on the last 
    day of pregnancy, subject to the limits in Sec. 440.250(q), and to 
    infants under one year of age who meet the following criteria:
        (1) Effective April 1, 1990, they have family income, established 
    in accordance with Sec. 435.610, that does not exceed 133 percent of 
    the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the size 
    involved, unless, as of December 19, 1989, the agency had elected to 
    apply a higher percentage (or percentages) in determining eligibility 
    for the optional categorically needy groups of low-income pregnant 
    women and infants described under Sec. 435.228. If the agency had 
    elected a percentage or percentages greater than 133 percent but no 
    more than 185 percent for either pregnant women or infants under 
    Sec. 435.228 or both, the percentage or percentages applicable under 
    paragraph (a)(1) of this section must be the percentage or percentages 
    that the agency specified in that election in--
        (i) The approved State plan;
        (ii) A State plan amendment submitted as of December 19, 1989, 
    whether approved or not; or
        (iii) State legislation enacted or State appropriations made as of 
    December 19, 1989.
        (2) At State option, they have resources that do not exceed 
    standards, established in accordance with Sec. 435.610, that are no 
    more restrictive than the SSI standard for pregnant women and no more 
    restrictive than the AFDC standard for infants under one year of age.
        (b) Eligibility period for women and infants. The agency must 
    provide Medicaid to--
        (1) Women described in paragraph (a) of this section, as long as 
    they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (a) of this 
    section, during their pregnancy and during a post partum period that 
    begins on the last day of the pregnancy and continues for 60 days. 
    Sections 435.170 and 435.918(c)(2) may also apply to these women.
        (2) Infants described in paragraph (a) of this section, as long as 
    they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (a) of this 
    section, until they reach age 1, except as provided in Sec. 435.520(b). 
    Section 435.117 may also apply to these infants.
        (c) Children age 1 up to age 6. The agency must provide Medicaid to 
    children who are age 1 but have not attained age 6 who meet the 
    following criteria:
        (1) Effective April 1, 1990, they have family income, established 
    in accordance with Sec. 435.610, that does not exceed 133 percent of 
    the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the size 
    involved; and
        (2) At State option, they have resources that do not exceed a 
    standard, established in accordance with Sec. 435.610, that is no more 
    restrictive than the AFDC standard.
        (d) Eligibility period for children up to age 6. The agency must 
    provide Medicaid to children described in paragraph (c) of this 
    section, as long as they continue to meet the criteria described in 
    paragraph (c) of this section, until they reach age 6, except as 
    provided in Sec. 435.520(b).
        (e) Children age 6 up to age 19. The agency must provide Medicaid 
    to children born after September 30, 1983, who have attained age 6 but 
    have not attained age 19 who meet the following criteria:
        (1) Effective July 1, 1991, they have family income, established in 
    accordance with Sec. 435.610, that does not exceed 100 percent of the 
    Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the size involved; 
    and
        (2) At State option, they have resources that do not exceed a 
    standard, established in accordance with Sec. 435.610, that is no more 
    restrictive than the AFDC standard.
        (f) Eligibility period for children age 6 up to age 19. The agency 
    must provide Medicaid to children described in paragraph (e) of this 
    section, as long as they continue to meet the criteria described in 
    paragraph (e) of this section, until they reach age 19, except as 
    provided in Sec. 435.520(b).
        (g) States with section 1115 waivers. The 50 States and the 
    District of Columbia must provide Medicaid to individuals described in 
    paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section, regardless of whether or 
    not they operate their Medicaid programs under waivers granted under 
    section 1115 of the Act.
        (h) Application of rules to Northern Mariana Islands and American 
    Samoa. The rules specified in this section do not apply in the Northern 
    Mariana Islands and American Samoa. In these two Territories, the rules 
    for optional coverage of individuals specified in Sec. 436.226 apply.
        7. The heading of subpart C is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart C--Options for Coverage of Individuals as Categorically Needy 
    and As Special Groups
    
        8. A new Sec. 435.228 is added under the undesignated center 
    heading ``Options for Coverage of Families and Children'' under subpart 
    C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.228  Pregnant women and infants with family incomes at a 
    percentage of Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) Subject to the conditions specified in paragraphs (b) and (c) 
    of this section, effective April 1, 1990, the agency may provide 
    Medicaid to any of the following groups of individuals who are not 
    otherwise eligible as mandatory categorically needy:
        (1) Pregnant women and women during the 60-day period beginning on 
    the last day of pregnancy with family incomes that are above 133 
    percent (or any higher percent applicable under Sec. 435.118), but no 
    more than 185 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a 
    family of the size involved; and
        (2) Infants under 1 year of age with family incomes that are above 
    133 percent (or any higher percentage applicable under Sec. 435.118), 
    but no more than 185 percent, of the Federal poverty income guidelines 
    for a family of the size involved.
        (b) Individuals described in paragraph (a) of this section are 
    eligible if--
        (1) Their family income meets the applicable standard in 
    Sec. 435.612(c); and
        (2) At State option, their resources meet the applicable standard 
    in Sec. 435.612(d).
        (c) If the agency chooses to provide Medicaid to pregnant women 
    specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, it must cover the women, 
    as long as they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph 
    (b) of this section, during the pregnancy and during the 60-day period 
    after the pregnancy ends. Sections 435.170 and 435.918(c)(2) may also 
    apply to these women. Services for these women are limited to services 
    specified in Sec. 440.250(q) of this subchapter.
        (d) If the agency chooses to provide Medicaid to infants described 
    in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, it must cover the infants, as long 
    as they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (b) of 
    this section, until they reach age 1, except as provided in 
    Sec. 435.520(b). Section 435.117 may also apply to these infants.
        9. A new Sec. 435.238 is added under the undesignated center 
    heading ``Options for Coverage of the Aged, Blind, and Disabled'' under 
    subpart C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.238  Aged and disabled individuals with incomes at or below 
    Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) The agency may provide Medicaid to individuals who are not 
    eligible as mandatory categorically needy and who--
        (1) Are 65 years of age or older; or are disabled as determined 
    under SSI;
        (2) Have family income that meets a standard established by the 
    State at a level that is no more than 100 percent of the Federal 
    poverty income level in accordance with Sec. 435.615(b); and
        (3) Have resources that meet the standard established in accordance 
    with Sec. 435.615(c).
        (b) An agency that elects the option under paragraph (a) of this 
    section must provide Medicaid to both aged and disabled groups of 
    individuals.
        10. A new undesignated center heading and Sec. 435.250 are added at 
    the end of subpart C to read as follows:
    
    Option for Coverage of Special Groups
    
    
    Sec. 435.250   Pregnant women eligible for a presumptive eligibility 
    period.
    
        (a) The agency may provide pregnant women with eligibility for 
    ambulatory prenatal care services based on a presumptive eligibility 
    determination made by a qualified provider if--
        (1) The woman's estimated gross family income appears to meet the 
    highest applicable income criteria under the State plan that are most 
    likely to be used if the woman applied for regular Medicaid;
        (2) The provider making the determination meets the requirements of 
    Sec. 440.172(c) of this subchapter; and
        (3) The agency has established procedures to ensure that the 
    screening and application requirements and procedures of Sec. 435.911 
    of subpart J of this part are met.
        (b) Pregnant women who are determined eligible for ambulatory 
    prenatal care services under this section are eligible during a 
    presumptive period in accordance with Sec. 435.911.
        11. In Sec. 435.301, paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(1) 
    introductory text are republished and paragraph (b)(1)(iii) is revised 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.301   General rules.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) If the agency chooses this option, the following provisions 
    apply:
        (1) The agency must provide Medicaid to the following individuals 
    who meet the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section:
    * * * * *
        (iii) All newborn children born to a woman who is eligible as 
    medically needy and is receiving Medicaid on the date of the child's 
    birth. The child is deemed to have applied and been found eligible for 
    Medicaid on the date of birth and remains eligible as medically needy 
    for one year so long as the woman remains eligible or (with respect to 
    infants born on or after January 1, 1991) would have remained eligible 
    if still pregnant and the child is a member of the woman's household 
    (as determined in accordance with Sec. 435.117(b)). If the woman's 
    basis of eligibility changes to categorically needy, the child is 
    eligible as categorically needy under Sec. 435.117.
    * * * * *
        12. Section 435.403 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (j) (1), 
    (2), and (3) as paragraphs (j) (2), (3), and (4), respectively, and 
    adding a new paragraph (j)(1) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.403  State residence.
    
    * * * * *
        (j) Specific prohibitions.
        (1) The agency may not deny Medicaid eligibility to an otherwise 
    qualified resident of the State because the individual's residence is 
    not maintained permanently or at a fixed address.
    * * * * *
        13. Section 435.500 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.500  Scope.
    
        This subpart prescribes categorical requirements for determining 
    the eligibility and continuing eligibility of both categorically and 
    medically needy individuals specified in subparts B, C, and D of this 
    part.
        14. Section 435.520 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.520  Age requirements for the aged and children.
    
        (a) In determining or redetermining eligibility, the agency must 
    not impose an age requirement of more than 65 years.
        (b) The agency must continue eligibility until the end of the 
    inpatient stay for infants and children who are eligible under 
    Sec. 435.116, 435.118, or 435.228, who are receiving covered inpatient 
    services on the date they reach the age limit for inclusion under the 
    State plan, and who would remain eligible under Sec. 435.116, 435.118, 
    or 435.228 but for attainment of that maximum age.
    * * * * *
        15. The heading of subpart G is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart G--General Financial Eligibility Requirements and Options 
    for the Categorically Needy and Special Groups
    
        16. Section 435.601 (as published on January 19, 1993 (58 FR 4929)) 
    is amended by revising paragraph (b) and paragraph (d)(1)(ii) (the text 
    of paragraph (d)(1) introductory text is republished) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.601  Application of financial eligibility methodologies.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Basic rule for use of cash assistance methodologies. Except as 
    specified in paragraphs (c), (d), and (e) of this section and in 
    Secs. 435.121, 435.610, and 435.615, in determining financial 
    eligibility of individuals as categorically and medically needy, the 
    agency must apply the financial methodologies and requirements of the 
    cash assistance program that is most closely categorically related to 
    the individual's status.
    * * * * *
        (d) Use of less restrictive methodologies than those under cash 
    assistance programs.
        (1) At State option, and subject to the conditions of paragraphs 
    (d)(2) through (d)(5) of this section, the agency may apply income and 
    resource methodologies that are less restrictive than the cash 
    assistance methodologies in determining eligibility of the following 
    groups:
    * * * * *
        (ii) Low-income pregnant women, infants, and children under 
    Secs. 435.118 and 435.228 and in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI), section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), and section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) of the Act;
    * * * * *
        17. Section 435.608 is amended by adding a new paragraph (c) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.608  Applications for other benefits.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) The agency may not require any pregnant woman, infant, or child 
    eligible under Sec. 435.118 or Sec. 435.228 to apply for AFDC benefits 
    as a condition of applying for or receiving Medicaid.
        18. A new Sec. 435.612 is added under subpart G to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.612  Income and resource standards and methodologies: Pregnant 
    women, infants, and children with family incomes at a percentage of 
    Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) General rules.
        (1) The agency must determine income and resource eligibility of 
    women, infants, and children under Secs. 435.118 and 435.228 in 
    accordance with the requirements of this section.
        (2) For purposes of this section, family size includes the unborn 
    child and other members of the Medicaid budgetary unit.
        (b) Establishing the income standard: mandatory groups. (1) For 
    mandatory groups of low-income pregnant women, infants under age 1, and 
    children age 1 up to age 6 under Sec. 435.118, the agency must 
    establish and apply an income standard, based on family size, at a 
    level that is 133 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for 
    a family of the size involved, unless it is required to establish a 
    higher level (not to exceed 185 percent) by virtue of 
    Sec. 435.118(a)(1).
        (2) For the mandatory group of low-income children age 6 up to age 
    19 under Sec. 435.118, the agency must establish and apply an income 
    standard, based on family size, at a level that is 100 percent of the 
    Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the size involved.
        (c) Establishing the income standard: optional groups. (1) For 
    optional groups of pregnant women and infants under Sec. 435.228, the 
    agency may establish separate income standards or use a single income 
    standard.
        (2) The standards must be based on family size, at a level that 
    is--
        (i) For pregnant women, above 133 percent and no more than 185 
    percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the 
    size involved; and
        (ii) For infants up to 1 year of age, above 133 percent and no more 
    than 185 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family 
    of the size involved.
        (d) Establishing the resource standard. At State option, the agency 
    may apply resource standards in determining financial eligibility that 
    are no more restrictive than the SSI standard for pregnant women, and 
    no more restrictive than the AFDC standard for infants and children.
        (e) Methodologies for determining income and resources. (1) Except 
    as specified in paragraphs (e)(2) through (5) of this section, in 
    determining family income and resources, the agency must use the 
    methodologies established in accordance with Sec. 435.601.
        (2) In determining family income, the agency must use the income 
    methodologies of the approved AFDC plan or the State's title IV-E 
    adoption assistance and foster care plan as appropriate, or it may 
    instead use any less restrictive methodologies specified in the State 
    plan which conform with Sec. 435.601(d). Methodologies include, but are 
    not limited to, those used for disregarding income.
        (3) In determining countable income, the agency may not deduct 
    costs incurred for medical care or any other type of remedial care to 
    reduce income to the level of the standard established.
        (4) The resource methodologies used in determining financial 
    eligibility of pregnant women must not be more restrictive than the 
    methodologies applied under SSI. The resource methodologies used in 
    determining financial eligibility of infants and children must not be 
    more restrictive than the methodologies applied under the State's 
    approved AFDC plan.
        (5) In determining the financial responsibility of relatives, the 
    State must use the requirements of Sec. 435.602.
        (f) State plan requirements. The State plan must--
        (1) Specify the income standards; and
        (2) If the State elects to apply resource standards, specify those 
    resource standards.
        19. A new Sec. 435.615 is added to subpart G to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.615  Income and resource standards and methodologies: Aged and 
    disabled individuals with incomes at or below Federal poverty income 
    guidelines.
    
        (a) General rule. If the agency provides Medicaid to aged and 
    disabled individuals under Sec. 435.238, it must determine financial 
    eligibility in accordance with the requirements of this section.
        (b) Establishing the income standard. (1) The agency must establish 
    and apply an income standard at a level that does not exceed 100 
    percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines applicable to a family 
    of the size involved.
        (2) For purposes of this section, ``family of the size involved'' 
    is based on the SSI concept of eligibility for an individual as an 
    individual or as part of a couple. If two individuals in a family are 
    married and eligible under section 1902(m), their income will be 
    compared to the Federal poverty income level for a family of two. In 
    all other situations, eligibility will be determined on an individual 
    basis, using the poverty level for one, with deeming of income as 
    appropriate (under SSI deeming rules that do not conflict with title 
    XIX of the Act).
        (c) Establishing the resource standard. The agency must establish 
    and apply a resource standard that is either--
        (1) The SSI resource standard; or
        (2) If the State has a medically needy program that uses a higher 
    resource standard, at State option, the resource standard applied to 
    the medically needy.
        (d) Methodologies for determining income and resources. (1) Subject 
    to the provisions of paragraph (d) (2) through (4) of this section, in 
    determining financial eligibility, the agency must use the income and 
    resource methodologies applied under SSI, or it may instead use any 
    less restrictive income and resource methodologies than SSI as 
    specified in the approved State plan in accordance with Sec. 435.601.
        (2) The agency may not deduct from income the costs incurred for 
    medical care or any other type of remedial care in order to reduce the 
    individual's income to the established income standard, except as 
    specified in paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
        (3) For severely disabled individuals who work, the agency may 
    deduct the reasonable costs for attendant care services, medical 
    devices, equipment, prostheses, and similar items and services 
    (generally not including routine drugs or routine medical services) 
    that are necessary in order for the individual to work.
        (4) In determining the financial responsibility of relatives, the 
    State must use the requirements of Sec. 435.602.
        (5) In determining eligibility under this section for an individual 
    entitled to monthly social security cash benefits, Title II COLA 
    increases must be disregarded from December of each year through the 
    month after the month in which the Federal poverty guideline for the 
    next year is published. During that period, the poverty level for the 
    previous year will be used for these individuals.
        (e) State plan requirement. The State plan must specify the income 
    standard and the resource standard by the family size involved.
        20. The heading of subpart J and Sec. 435.907 are revised to read 
    as follows:
    
    Subpart J--Eligibility in the States, the District of Columbia, the 
    Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa
    
    
    Sec. 435.907  Written application.
    
        (a) The agency must require a written application from the 
    applicant, an authorized representative, or, if the applicant is 
    incompetent or incapacitated, someone acting responsibly for the 
    applicant.
        (b) The application must be on a form prescribed by the agency and 
    signed under a penalty of perjury.
        (c) [Reserved]
        (d) The application form must solicit sufficient information to 
    allow the agency to reasonably make a decision of eligibility or 
    ineligibility.
    
    
    Sec. 435.916  [Redesignated]
    
        20a. Section 435.916 is redesignated as Sec. 435.918 under the 
    undesignated center heading ``Redeterminations of Medicaid 
    Eligibility''.
        21. Sections 435.911, 435.912, 435.913, and 435.914 are 
    redesignated as Secs. 435.914, 435.915, 435.916, and 435.917, 
    respectively, and new Secs. 435.911 and 435.912 are added under the 
    undesignated center heading ``Application'' under subpart J to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.911  Screening and application procedures for pregnant women 
    for presumptive eligibility determinations.
    
        (a) If the agency elects to provide presumptive Medicaid 
    eligibility for pregnant women under the provisions of Sec. 435.250, 
    the requirements and conditions under paragraphs (b) through (e) of 
    this section must be met.
        (b) A pregnant woman may be determined eligible for only one 
    presumptive eligibility period during any one pregnancy.
        (c) The presumptive eligibility determination must be made by a 
    qualified provider who meets the requirements of Sec. 440.172(c) of 
    this subchapter.
        (d) The agency must provide qualified providers with--
        (1) Screening forms and guidelines for determining presumptive 
    eligibility under the plan and the eligibility group under which a 
    pregnant woman is most likely to be eligible under regular Medicaid if 
    she applies.
        (2) Information on how to assist a pregnant woman in completing and 
    filing the screening form for presumptive eligibility for ambulatory 
    prenatal care services available to eligible pregnant women.
        (3) Application forms for Medicaid under the plan, which forms may 
    be those developed for use by women described in section 1902(l)(1)(A) 
    of the Act, and instructions on how to help women complete and file 
    these forms.
        (e) The agency must establish procedures to ensure that qualified 
    providers--
        (1) Notify the agency in writing that a pregnant woman is 
    presumptively eligible within 5 working days after the date the 
    determination is made;
        (2) Inform the woman in writing at the time the determination is 
    made that she has until the last day of the month following the month 
    in which the determination is made to file a Medicaid application if 
    she wishes to continue her presumptive eligibility beyond that date. 
    Providers also must inform the woman that if she files a Medicaid 
    application by that date, her presumptive eligibility will end on the 
    day a decision is made on her Medicaid application.
        (3) In writing, inform any pregnant woman who is determined not 
    presumptively eligible of the reason why she was determined ineligible 
    and that she may file a Medicaid application with the agency if she 
    wishes to have a determination made on a regular Medicaid application. 
    A determination of ineligibility for ambulatory prenatal care is not 
    subject to appeal under part 431 of this subchapter.
        (f) The agency must establish methods for monitoring the 
    presumptive eligibility determinations made by qualified providers to 
    ensure the integrity of the determinations and to take any corrective 
    action that may be necessary.
    
    
    Sec. 435.912  Application for Medicaid by pregnant women following a 
    presumptive eligibility determination.
    
        A pregnant woman who is determined by a qualified provider to be 
    presumptively eligible for ambulatory prenatal care services must file 
    an application for Medicaid with the agency by the last day of the 
    month following the month in which the presumptive eligibility 
    determination is made in order to extend the period of presumptive 
    eligibility until her eligibility for regular Medicaid has been 
    determined.
        22. Redesignated Sec. 435.918 is amended by revising paragraph (c) 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.918  Periodic redeterminations of Medicaid eligibility.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Agency action on information about changes.
        (1) Except as provided for in paragraph (c)(2) of this section--
        (i) The agency must promptly redetermine eligibility when it 
    receives information about changes in a recipient's circumstances that 
    may affect his or her eligibility.
        (ii) If the agency has information about anticipated changes in a 
    recipient's circumstances, it must redetermine eligibility at the 
    appropriate time based on those changes.
        (2) Effective January 1, 1991, the agency must consider any 
    pregnant woman who has established eligibility for Medicaid under this 
    part and who, because of a change in family income, would no longer be 
    eligible, to be eligible to receive services as mandatory categorically 
    needy under Sec. 435.118 throughout the pregnancy and the 60-day period 
    after pregnancy ends and for any remaining days in the month in which 
    the 60th day falls, without regard to any changes in income that may 
    occur during this period.
        (i) This provision does not apply to women who are determined to be 
    presumptively eligible under Sec. 435.250 but are subsequently 
    determined to be ineligible for regular Medicaid.
        (ii) A woman who is eligible for continued coverage under this 
    section retains her existing status as a mandatory categorically needy, 
    optional categorically needy, or medically needy recipient, even though 
    she is entitled to the services that are available to a mandatory 
    categorically needy pregnant woman described in Sec. 435.118. As a 
    result, she must continue to meet eligibility requirements associated 
    with her status (for example, she may have to meet a spenddown if she 
    is medically needy), except that any increase in income will have no 
    effect on her eligibility.
        23. New Secs. 435.932 and 435.935 are added under undesignated 
    center heading ``Furnishing Medicaid'' under subpart J to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.932  Issuance of eligibility cards to homeless individuals.
    
        (a) The agency must establish a method for making available to 
    individuals who do not reside at a permanent dwelling or at a fixed 
    address cards that evidence Medicaid eligibility.
        (b) The State plan must describe the method.
    
    
    Sec. 435.935  Enhancing pregnancy outcomes.
    
        The State plan must--
        (a) Define a high-risk pregnancy;
        (b) Describe the process the State uses to identify, during the 
    pregnancy, high-risk women; and
        (c) Specify the steps that providers and other organizations and 
    agencies involved in the delivery of services to pregnant women will 
    take to ensure that these high-risk Medicaid recipients receive 
    appropriate services designed to enhance the probability of a healthy, 
    full-term pregnancy, uncomplicated delivery, and a healthy outcome for 
    both mother and child.
        24. Section 435.1001 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.1001  FFP for administration.
    
        (a) FFP is available in the necessary administrative costs the 
    State incurs in--
        (1) Determining and redetermining Medicaid eligibility and in 
    providing Medicaid to eligible individuals; and
        (2) Determining presumptive eligibility for pregnant women and in 
    providing ambulatory prenatal care to presumptively eligible women.
    * * * * *
        25. Section 435.1002 is amended by revising paragraph (a) and 
    adding new paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.1002  FFP for services.
    
        (a) Except for the limitations and conditions specified in 
    paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section and in Secs. 435.1007 and 
    435.1008, FFP is available in expenditures for Medicaid services for 
    all recipients whose coverage is required or allowed under this part.
    * * * * *
        (c) FFP is available in expenditures for ambulatory prenatal care 
    services covered under the plan (as defined in Sec. 440.172) that are 
    furnished to pregnant women who are determined by a qualified provider 
    to be presumptively eligible when these services are furnished during a 
    presumptive eligibility period by a provider that is eligible for 
    payment under the State plan, regardless of whether or not the women 
    are determined eligible for regular Medicaid following the presumptive 
    eligibility period.
        (d) FFP is not available in expenditures for services provided to 
    low-income pregnant women and infants covered as optional categorically 
    needy under Sec. 435.228 if the State has in effect under its AFDC plan 
    payment levels (that is, the amount of the AFDC payment for basic needs 
    made to a family with no other income) that are less than those in 
    effect under its AFDC plan on July 1, 1987.
    
    PART 436--ELIGIBILITY IN GUAM, PUERTO RICO, AND THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
    
        C. Part 436 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 436 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. The heading of subpart C is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart C--Options for Coverage of Individuals as Categorically 
    Needy and as Special Groups
    
        3. In Sec. 436.2, paragraph (a) introductory text is republished 
    and several entries are added in numerical order to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.2  Basis.
    
        (a) This part interprets the following sections of the Act and 
    public laws which state eligibility requirements and standards:
    * * * * *
    1902(c)  Conditions of State plan approval--States must maintain AFDC 
    payment levels and not require that section 1902(1) low-income pregnant 
    women, infants, and children apply for AFDC benefits.
    * * * * *
    1902(e)(6)  Mandatory continuation of Medicaid for pregnant women 
    without consideration of changes in income up to a specified period 
    after pregnancy ends.
    1902(e)(7)  Continuation of Medicaid eligibility for certain infants 
    and children receiving inpatient care.
    1902(l)  Description of pregnant women, infants, and children with 
    incomes related to the Federal poverty income level.
    1902(m)  Description of aged and disabled individuals with incomes at 
    or below the Federal poverty income level.
    * * * * *
    1902(r)(2)  Use of less restrictive income and resource methodologies 
    than those under the cash assistance programs in determining financial 
    eligibility for specified categorically needy and medically needy 
    groups.
    * * * * *
    1920  Optional presumptive eligibility period for pregnant women.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 436.120, paragraph (c) introductory text is republished 
    and paragraphs (c) (1) and (2) are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.120  Qualified pregnant women and children who are not 
    qualified family members.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) The agency must provide Medicaid to children who meet all of 
    the following criteria:
        (1) They are born after September 30, 1983, or at State option, an 
    earlier designated date;
        (2) They are under 19 years of age; and
    * * * * *
        5. Section 436.124 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.124  Newborn children.
    
        (a) The agency must provide categorically needy Medicaid 
    eligibility to a child born to a woman who is eligible as categorically 
    needy and is receiving Medicaid on the date of the child's birth. The 
    child is deemed to have applied and been found eligible for Medicaid on 
    the date of birth and remains eligible as categorically needy for one 
    year so long as the woman remains eligible or (with respect to infants 
    born on or after January 1, 1991) would have remained eligible if still 
    pregnant and the child is a member of the woman's household. If the 
    mother's basis of eligibility changes to medically needy, the child is 
    eligible as medically needy under Sec. 436.301(b)(1)(iii).
        (b) An infant is considered to be a member of his or her mother's 
    household for so long as he or she is continuously hospitalized after 
    birth, unless the mother has legally relinquished control of the child 
    or the State has established that she has abandoned the child. After 
    the infant's release from the hospital, or in situations not involving 
    hospitalization, States must apply the AFDC rules to determine if an 
    infant (who is not an SSI beneficiary) is a member of his or her 
    mother's household.
        6. A new Sec. 436.226 is added under the undesignated center 
    heading ``Options for Coverage of Families and Children and the Aged, 
    Blind, and Disabled, Including Pregnant Women'' (as published on 
    January 19, 1993 (58 FR 4935)) under subpart C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.226  Pregnant women, infants, and children with family incomes 
    at a percentage of Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) Groups of pregnant women, infants and childen. Subject to the 
    conditions specified in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, the 
    agency may provide Medicaid to any of the following groups of 
    individuals who are not eligible as mandatory categorically needy:
        (1) Pregnant women and women during the 60-day period beginning on 
    the last day of pregnancy with family incomes that are at or below 185 
    percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family of the 
    size involved, or at or below any lesser percentage that the agency 
    chooses.
        (2) Infants under 1 year of age with family incomes that are at or 
    below 185 percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a family 
    of the size involved, or at or below any lesser percentage that the 
    agency chooses.
        (3) Children with family incomes at or below 133 percent of the 
    Federal poverty income guidelines who are age 1 but have not attained 
    age 6.
        (4) Children with family incomes at or below 100 percent of the 
    Federal poverty income guidelines who are born after September 30, 1983 
    and who are age 6 but have not attained age 19.
        (b) Conditions of eligibility. Individuals described in paragraph 
    (a) of this section may be eligible if they--
        (1) Have family income that meets the applicable standard 
    established in accordance with Sec. 436.610(b); and
        (2) At State option, have resources that meet the applicable 
    standard established in accordance with Sec. 436.610(c).
        (c) Eligibility period for women. If the agency chooses to provide 
    Medicaid to women specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, it 
    must provide Medicaid to such women, as long as they continue to meet 
    the criteria described in paragraph (b) of this section, during the 
    pregnancy and during a postpartum period that begins on the last day of 
    the pregnancy and continues for 60 days. Sections 436.122 and 
    435.918(c)(2) of this subchapter may also apply to these women. 
    Services to these women are limited to services specified in 
    Sec. 440.250(q) of this subchapter.
        (d) Eligibility period for infants under age 1. If the agency 
    chooses to provide Medicaid to infants specified in paragraph (a)(2) of 
    this section, it must provide Medicaid to such infants, as long as they 
    continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (b) of this 
    section, until they reach age 1. Section 436.124 may also apply to 
    these infants.
        (e) Eligibility period for children age 1 up to age 6. If the 
    agency chooses to provide Medicaid to children specified in paragraph 
    (a)(3) of this section, it must provide Medicaid to such children, as 
    long as they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (b) 
    of this section, until they reach age 6.
        (f) Eligibility period for children age 6 up to age 19. If the 
    agency chooses to provide Medicaid to children specified in paragraph 
    (a)(4) of this section, it must provide Medicaid to such children, as 
    long as they continue to meet the criteria described in paragraph (b) 
    of this section, until they reach age 19.
        (g) The provisions of this section apply to Guam, Puerto Rico, the 
    Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and America Samoa.
        7. A new Sec. 436.235 is added under the undesignated center 
    heading ``Options for Coverage of the Aged, Blind, and Disabled'' under 
    subpart C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.235  Aged and disabled individuals with incomes at or below 
    Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) The agency may provide Medicaid to individuals who are not 
    eligible as mandatory categorically needy and who--
        (1) Are 65 years of age or older, or are disabled as determined 
    under section 1614 of the Act;
        (2) Have family income that meets a standard established by the 
    State at a level that is no more than 100 percent of the Federal 
    poverty income level in accordance with Sec. 436.615(b); and
        (3) Have resources that meet the standard established in accordance 
    with Sec. 436.615(c).
        (b) An agency that elects the option under paragraph (a) of this 
    section must provide Medicaid to both aged and disabled groups of 
    individuals.
        8. A new undesignated center heading and Sec. 436.250 is added at 
    the end of subpart C to read as follows:
    
    Options for Coverage of Special Groups
    
    
    Sec. 436.250  Pregnant women eligible during a presumptive eligibility 
    period.
    
        (a) The agency may provide pregnant women with eligibility for 
    ambulatory prenatal care services on the basis of a presumptive 
    eligibility determination made by a qualified provider if--
        (1) The woman's estimated gross family income appears to meet the 
    highest applicable income criteria under the State's approved plan that 
    are most likely to be used if the woman applied for regular Medicaid;
        (2) The provider making the determination meets the requirements of 
    Sec. 440.172(c) of this subchapter; and
        (3) The agency has established procedures to ensure that the 
    screening and application requirements and procedures of Sec. 435.911 
    of this subchapter are met.
        (b) Pregnant women who are determined eligible for ambulatory 
    prenatal care services under this section are eligible during a 
    presumptive period in accordance with Sec. 435.911(e).
        9. In Sec. 436.301, paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(1) 
    introductory text are republished and paragraph (b)(1)(iii) is revised 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.301  General rules.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) If the agency chooses this option, the following provisions 
    apply:
        (1) The agency must provide Medicaid to the following individuals 
    who meet the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section:
    * * * * *
        (iii) All newborn children born to a woman who is eligible as 
    medically needy and is receiving Medicaid on the date of the child's 
    birth. The child is deemed to have applied and been found eligible for 
    Medicaid on the date of birth and remains eligible as medically needy 
    for one year so long as the woman remains eligible or (with respect to 
    infants born on or after January 1, 1991) would have remained eligible 
    if still pregnant and the child is a member of the woman's household 
    (as determined in accordance with Sec. 436.124(b)). If the woman's 
    basis of eligibility changes to categorically needy, the child is 
    eligible as categorically needy under Sec. 436.124.
    * * * * *
        10. Section 436.403 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (i) (1), 
    (2), and (3) as paragraphs (i) (2), (3), and (4), respectively, and 
    adding a new paragraph (i) (1) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.403  State residence.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) Specific prohibitions.
        (1) The agency may not deny Medicaid eligibility to an otherwise 
    qualified resident of the State because the individual's residence is 
    not maintained permanently or at a fixed address.
    * * * * *
        11. Section 436.500 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.500  Scope.
    
        This subpart prescribes categorical requirements for determining 
    the eligibility and continuing eligibility of both categorically needy 
    and medically needy individuals specified in subparts B, C, and D of 
    this part.
        12. Section 436.520 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.520  Age requirements for the aged and children.
    
        (a) In determining or redetermining eligibility, the agency must 
    not impose an age requirement of more than 65 years.
        (b) The agency must continue eligibility until the end of the 
    inpatient stay for infants and children who are eligible under 
    Sec. 436.120 or Sec. 436.226, who are receiving covered inpatient 
    services on the date that they reach the age limit for inclusion under 
    the State plan, and who would remain eligible under Sec. 436.120 or 
    Sec. 436.226 but for attainment of that maximum age.
        13. Section 436.601 is amended by revising paragraph (b), the 
    heading of paragraph (d), and paragraph (d)(1)(ii) (the text of 
    paragraph (d)(1) introductory text is republished) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.601  Application of financial eligibility methodologies.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Basic rule for use of cash assistance methodologies. Except as 
    specified in paragraphs (c), (d), and (e) of this section and in 
    Secs. 436.610, and 436.615, in determining financial eligibility of 
    individuals as categorically and medically needy, the agency must apply 
    the financial methodologies and requirements of the cash assistance 
    program that is most closely categorically related to the individual's 
    status.
    * * * * *
        (d) Use of less restrictive methodologies than those under cash 
    assistance programs.
        (1) At State option, and subject to the conditions of paragraphs 
    (d)(2) through (d)(5) of this section, the agency may apply income and 
    resource methodologies that are less restrictive than the cash 
    assistance methodologies in determining eligibility of the following 
    groups:
    * * * * *
        (ii) Low-income pregnant women, infants, and children under 
    Secs. 436.226 and in section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(IV), section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VI), section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VII), and section 
    1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(IX) of the Act;
    * * * * *
        14. Section 436.608 is amended by adding a new paragraph (c) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.608  Applications for other benefits.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) The agency may not require any pregnant woman, infant, or child 
    eligible under Sec. 436.226 to apply for AFDC benefits as a condition 
    of applying for or receiving Medicaid.
        15. A new Sec. 436.612 is added to subpart G to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.612  Income and resource standards and methodologies: Pregnant 
    women, infants, and children with family incomes at a percentage of the 
    Federal poverty income guidelines.
    
        (a) General rules.
        (1) The agency must determine income and resource eligibility of 
    women, infants, and children under Sec. 436.226 in accordance with the 
    requirements of this section.
        (2) For purposes of this section, family size includes the unborn 
    child and other members of the Medicaid budgetary unit.
        (b) Establishing the income standard.
        (1) For optional groups of pregnant women and infants under 
    Sec. 436.226(a)(1) and (2), the agency may establish separate income 
    standards or use a single income standard.
        (2) For the optional groups of children under Sec. 436.226(a) (3) 
    and (4), the agency must establish separate income standards.
        (3) The standards must be based on family size--
        (i) For pregnant women, at a level that covers family incomes that 
    are at or below 185 percent (or at or below some lesser percent that 
    the agency chooses) of the Federal poverty income guidelines for a 
    family of the size involved;
        (ii) For infants under 1 year of age, at a level that covers family 
    incomes that are at or below 185 percent (or at or below some lesser 
    percent that the agency chooses) of the Federal poverty income 
    guidelines for a family of the size involved;
        (iii) For children age 1 up to age 6, at a level that covers family 
    incomes that are at or below 133 percent of the Federal poverty income 
    guidelines for a family of the size involved;
        (iv) For children born after September 30, 1983 who are 6 years of 
    age up to age 19 years of age, at a level that covers family incomes 
    that are at or below 100 percent of the Federal poverty income 
    guidelines for a family of the size involved.
        (c) Establishing the resource standard. At State option, the agency 
    may apply resource standards in determining financial eligibility that 
    are no more restrictive than the SSI standard for pregnant women and no 
    more restrictive than the AFDC standard for infants and children.
        (d) Methodologies for determining income and resources. (1) Except 
    as specified in paragraph (d) (2) through (4) of this section, in 
    determining family income and resources, the agency must use the 
    methodologies established in accordance with Sec. 436.601.
        (2) In determining family income, the agency must use the income 
    methodologies of the approved AFDC plan or the State's title IV-E 
    adoption assistance and foster care plan as appropriate, or it may use 
    any less restrictive methodologies specified in the State plan which 
    conform with Sec. 436.601(d). Methodologies include, but are not 
    limited to, those used for disregarding income.
        (3) In determining countable income, the agency may not deduct 
    costs incurred for medical care or any other type of remedial care to 
    reduce income to the level of the standard established.
        (4) The resource methodologies used in determining financial 
    eligibility of pregnant women must not be more restrictive than the 
    methodologies applied under SSI. The resource methodologies used in 
    determining financial eligibility of infants and children must not be 
    more restrictive than the methodologies applied under the State's 
    approved AFDC plan.
        (5) In determining the financial responsibility of relatives, the 
    State must use the requirements of Sec. 436.602.
        (e) State plan requirements. The State plan must--
        (1) Specify the income standards; and
        (2) If the State elects to apply resource standards, specify those 
    resource standards.
        16. A new Sec. 436.615 is added to subpart G to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.615  Income and resource standards and methodologies: Aged and 
    disabled individuals with incomes at or below Federal poverty income 
    guidelines.
    
        (a) General rule. If the agency provides Medicaid to aged and 
    disabled individuals under Sec. 436.235, it must determine financial 
    eligibility in accordance with the requirements of this section.
        (b) Establishing the income standard. (1) The agency must establish 
    and apply an income standard at a level that does not exceed 100 
    percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines applicable to a family 
    of the size involved.
        (2) For purposes of this section, family of the size involved is 
    based on the SSI concept of eligibility for an individual as an 
    individual or as part of a couple. If two individuals are married and 
    eligible under section 1902(m), their income will be compared to the 
    Federal poverty income level for a family of two. In all other 
    situations, eligibility will be determined on an individual basis, 
    using the poverty level for one, with deeming of income as appropriate 
    (under SSI deeming rules that do not conflict with title XIX of the 
    Act).
        (c) Establishing the resource standard. The agency must apply a 
    resource standard that is either--
        (1) The SSI resource standard; or
        (2) If the State has a medically needy program that uses a higher 
    resource standard, at State option, the resource standard applied to 
    the medically needy.
        (d) Methodologies for determining income and resources. (1) Subject 
    to the provisions of paragraph (d) (2) through (4) of this section, the 
    agency must use the methodologies applied under sections 1612 and 1613 
    of the Act in determining countable income and resources or may instead 
    use any less restrictive income and resource methodologies specified in 
    the State plan in accordance with Sec. 436.601. Methodologies include, 
    but are not limited to, those used in disregarding income.
        (2) The agency may not deduct from income the costs incurred for 
    medical care or any other type of remedial care to reduce the 
    individual's income to the established income standard, except as 
    specified in paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
        (3) For severely disabled individuals who work, the agency may 
    deduct the reasonable costs for attendant care services, medical 
    devices, equipment, prostheses, and similar items and services 
    (generally not including routine drugs or routine medical services) 
    that are necessary in order for the individual to work.
        (4) In determining the financial responsibilities of relatives, the 
    agency must apply the requirements of Sec. 436.602.
        (5) In determining eligibility under this section for an individual 
    entitled to monthly social security cash benefits, Title II COLA 
    increases must be disregarded from December of each year through the 
    month after the month in which the Federal poverty guideline for the 
    next year is published. During that period, the poverty level for the 
    previous year will be used for these individuals.
        (e) State plan requirement. The State plan must specify the income 
    standard and the resource standard by the family size involved.
        17. Section 436.1001 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.1001  FFP for administration.
    
        (a) FFP is available in the necessary administrative costs the 
    State incurs in--
        (1) Determining and redetermining Medicaid eligibility and in 
    providing Medicaid to eligible individuals; and
        (2) Determining presumptive eligibility for pregnant women and in 
    providing ambulatory prenatal care to presumptively eligible women.
    * * * * *
        18. Section 436.1002 is amended by revising paragraph (a) and 
    adding new paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 436.1002  FFP for services.
    
        (a) Except for the limitations and subject to the conditions 
    specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, FFP is available 
    in expenditures for Medicaid services for all recipients whose coverage 
    is required or allowed under this part.
    * * * * *
        (c) FFP is available in expenditures for ambulatory prenatal care 
    services covered by the plan that are furnished to pregnant women who 
    are determined by a qualified provider to be presumptively eligible, 
    when these services are furnished during a presumptive eligibility 
    period by a provider that is eligible for payment under the State plan, 
    regardless of whether or not the women are determined eligible for 
    Medicaid following the presumptive eligibility period.
        (d) FFP is not available in expenditures for services provided to 
    low-income pregnant women and infants covered under Sec. 436.226(a) (1) 
    and (2) if the State has in effect under its AFDC plan payment levels 
    (that is, the amount of the AFDC payment for basic needs made to a 
    family with no other income) that are less than those in effect under 
    its AFDC plan on July 1, 1987.
    
    PART 440--SERVICES: GENERAL PROVISIONS
    
        D. Part 440 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 440 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. Section 440.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 440.1  Basis and purpose.
    
        (a) This subpart interprets--
        (1) Section 1905(a) of the Act, which lists the services included 
    in the term ``medical assistance'';
        (2) Sections 1905 (c), (d), (f) through (i), (l), (m), and (p)(3) 
    of the Act, which define services or specify conditions for provision 
    of some of those services; and
        (3) Section 1915(c) of the Act, which lists as ``medical 
    assistance'' certain home and community-based services provided under 
    waivers under that section to individuals who would otherwise require 
    institutionalization.
        (b) This subpart also interprets--
        (1) Section 1905(a)(3) of the Act with respect to laboratory 
    services (Secs. 447.10 and 447.342 also contain related provisions on 
    laboratory services);
        (2) Section 1913 of the Act with respect to ``swing-bed'' services 
    (Sec. 447.280 of this subchapter and Sec. 482.66 of this chapter also 
    contain related provisions); and
        (3) Section 1920 of the Act which specifies that a State plan may 
    provide for making ambulatory prenatal care available to presumptively 
    eligible pregnant women during a prescribed presumptive period. The 
    care must be covered under the State plan and be furnished by providers 
    who are eligible for payments under the State plan.
        3. A new Sec. 440.172 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 440.172  Ambulatory prenatal care.
    
        (a) Ambulatory prenatal care means services covered under the plan 
    that--
        (1) Are related to pregnancy or to any other condition that may 
    complicate pregnancy;
        (2) Are furnished to pregnant women who have been determined 
    presumptively eligible by a qualified provider;
        (3) Are furnished during the presumptive eligibility period;
        (4) Are furnished by a provider that is eligible to receive payment 
    under the State plan; and
        (5) Are furnished to pregnant women as outpatients as defined in 
    Sec. 440.2.
        (b) Ambulatory prenatal care does not include procedures to deliver 
    or remove an embryo or fetus from the mother or any procedures 
    following that delivery or removal.
        (c) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, qualified 
    provider means a provider who--
        (1) Is eligible to receive payment under the approved plan;
        (2) Furnishes such types of services as outpatient hospital 
    services as defined in Sec. 440.20(a), rural health clinic services (if 
    provided for in the State plan) as defined in Sec. 440.20(b), or clinic 
    services as defined in Sec. 440.90;
        (3) Is determined by the agency to be capable of making presumptive 
    eligibility determinations for pregnant women based on family income; 
    and
        (4) Meets one of the following conditions:
        (i) Receives funds for migrant health centers or community health 
    centers under sections 329, 330, or 340 of the Public Health Service 
    Act; receives funds for the maternal and child health services block 
    grant program (title V of the Act); or receives funds under title V of 
    the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.
        (ii) Participates in the Special Supplemental Food Program for 
    Women, Infants, and Children under section 17 of the Child Nutrition 
    Act of 1966 or the Commodity Supplemental Food Program under section 
    4(a) of the Agriculture and Consumer Protection Act of 1973.
        (iii) Participates in a State perinatal program; or
        (iv) Is the Indian Health Service or is a health program or 
    facility operated by a tribe or tribal organization under the Indian 
    Self-Determination Act.
        4. Section 440.250 is amended by adding new paragraph (q) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 440.250  Limits on comparability of services.
    
    * * * * *
        (q) Services to pregnant women with incomes related to the Federal 
    poverty income guidelines who are eligible under Secs. 435.l18, 
    435.228, and 436.226 must be limited to services related to pregnancy 
    (including prenatal, delivery, family planning, and postpartum 
    services) and to services for the treatment of conditions which may 
    complicate pregnancy. Any different treatment provided under this 
    section for pregnant women does not require or permit such treatment 
    for other Medicaid-eligible individuals.
    
    PART 447--PAYMENT FOR SERVICES
    
        E. Part 447 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 447 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
    
    Sec. 447.59  [Redesignated]
    
        2. Part 447 is amended by redesignating Sec. 447.59 as Sec. 447.80 
    under subpart A.
        3. Section 447.50 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 447.50  Cost sharing: Basis and purpose.
    
        (a) Basis. Sections 1902(a)(14) and 1916 of the Act permit States 
    to require certain recipients to share some of the costs of Medicaid by 
    imposing upon them such payments as enrollment fees, premiums, 
    deductibles, coinsurance, copayments, or similar cost-sharing charges.
        (b) Purpose. For States that impose cost sharing payments, 
    Secs. 447.51 through 447.85 prescribe State plan requirements and 
    options for cost sharing, specify the standards and conditions under 
    which States may impose cost-sharing, set forth minimum amounts and the 
    methods for determining maximum amounts, and prescribe conditions for 
    FFP that relate to cost-sharing requirements.
        4. Section 447.51 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 447.51  Requirements and options.
    
        (a) The plan must provide that the Medicaid agency does not impose 
    any enrollment fee, premium, or similar charge upon categorically needy 
    individuals, as defined in Secs. 435.4 and 436.3 of this subchapter, 
    for any services available under the plan, except as specified in 
    paragraph (b) of this section.
        (b) The plan may impose a monthly premium on optional categorically 
    needy poverty level pregnant women and infants under age 1, as defined 
    in Secs. 435.228 and 436.226 of this subchapter, if the requirements of 
    Sec. 447.60 are met.
        (c) The plan may impose an enrollment fee, premium, or similar 
    charge on medically needy individuals, as defined in Secs. 435.4 and 
    436.3 of this subchapter, for any services available under the plan.
        (d) For each charge imposed under paragraph (c) of this section, 
    the plan must specify--
        (1) The amount of the charge;
        (2) The period of liability for the charge; and
        (3) The consequences for an individual who does not pay.
        (e) The plan must provide that any charge imposed under paragraph 
    (c) of this section is related to total gross family income as set 
    forth under Sec. 447.52.
        5. In Sec. 447.52, the cross-reference in the introductory text to 
    ``Sec. 447.51(d)'' is revised to read ``Sec. 447.51(e)''.
        6. A new Sec. 447.60 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 447.60  Imposition of premium on low-income pregnant women and 
    infants under age 1.
    
        (a) Basic option. The plan may provide for imposing a monthly 
    premium on either the optional group of pregnant women or the optional 
    group of infants under age 1, or both, who are eligible for and 
    receiving Medicaid under Secs. 435.228 and 436.226 of this subchapter 
    if their family income equals or exceeds 150 percent of the Federal 
    poverty income guidelines for a family of the size involved. Family 
    income is determined in accordance with Secs. 435.612 and 436.612 of 
    this subchapter.
        (b) Premium limits. If a monthly premium is imposed under the 
    option under paragraph (a) of this section, the premium amount may not 
    be more than 10 percent of the amount by which the family income, after 
    deducting expenses for the care of a dependent child, exceeds 150 
    percent of the Federal poverty income guidelines.
        (c) Prepayment prohibited. The agency must not require prepayment 
    of the premium imposed under this section.
        (d) Termination for nonpayment of premium. The agency may terminate 
    the eligibility of an individual for Medicaid if the individual fails 
    to pay the premium for a period of at least 60 calendar days from the 
    date due. The agency must comply with the requirements of part 431, 
    subpart E, of this subchapter before terminating an individual.
        (e) Waiver of premium payment. The agency may waive payment of the 
    premium if it determines that requiring the payment of the premium 
    would create an undue hardship on the individual.
        (f) Method of paying premium. The agency may use State or local 
    funds under other programs to pay for premiums imposed under this 
    section. These funds do not count as income to the individual for whom 
    the payment is made.
        (g) State plan requirement. For premiums imposed under this 
    section, the plan must specify--
        (1) The method by which premiums are determined;
        (2) The period of time in which an individual has to pay a premium 
    before Medicaid is terminated;
        (3) The consequences for an individual who does not pay the premium 
    timely; and
        (4) Whether the agency will waive payment of premiums because of 
    undue hardship on an individual.
        7. Under the undesignated center heading ``Federal Participation,'' 
    a new Sec. 447.85 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 447.85  FFP for ambulatory prenatal care.
    
        If a State plan provides for coverage of ambulatory prenatal care, 
    as defined in Sec. 440.172 of this subchapter, to pregnant women during 
    a presumptive eligibility period, FFP is available for payments made on 
    the woman's behalf for services covered under the plan that are 
    furnished during that period, regardless of whether the pregnant woman 
    is determined to be eligible for Medicaid after the presumptive 
    eligibility period ends.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.778 Medical 
    Assistance Programs)
    
        Dated: August 27, 1993.
    Bruce C. Vladeck,
    Administrator, Health Care, Financing Administration.
    
        Dated: November 28, 1993.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 94-6540 Filed 3-22-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/23/1994
Department:
Health Care Finance Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
94-6540
Dates:
Written comments will be considered if we receive them at the
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: March 23, 1994, MB-13-P
RINs:
0938-AD17
CFR: (61)
42 CFR 435.118(a)(1)
42 CFR 436.226(a)(1)
42 CFR 435.520(b)
42 CFR 440.172(c)
42 CFR 440.172(c)
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