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After Court Blocks Bevin’s Medicaid Changes, Kentucky Halts Dental, Vision Benefits For Some

Starting on Sunday, Kentuckians with Medicaid who gained coverage because of the expansion will lose accessto dental and vision benefits following a Friday court ruling striking down Gov. Matt Bevin’s changes to the program.

This applies to adults who became eligible for Medicaid when it was expanded, including adults without dependents who the state considers “able-bodied.” These are the people who would have had to work, volunteer or do training for 80 hours a month to keep medical benefits under the plan proposed by Bevin.

If the court had not struck Kentucky HEALTH — as the state calls the changes — these adults would have only had access to vision and dental coverage through earning dollars in a “My Rewards” account. Now, they’re losing access entirely.

On its website, the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services laid out its reasons for pulling vision and dental coverage for these enrollees.

“If you received a notice saying you could access vision and dental services through a My Rewards Account, you will not have access to dental and vision benefits,” the state writes. “The legal decision has stopped the ability to use the My Rewards dollars in order to purchase dental and vision services.”

This doesn’t apply to pregnant women, children, individuals who are considered medically frail, former foster youth up to age 26, and groups covered by Medicaid before the expansion. These people will keep their dental and vision coverage.

The court said on Friday in it’s ruling that the state and the federal government had not considered how all the Medicaid changes would impact low-income residents’ ability to get health insurance, as that was the goal of the program written by law.

That ruling struck down the most-controversial part, the “community engagement” requirement that would have meant many enrollees work, volunteer or job train for 80 hours a month in exchange for insurance.

On Friday, Cabinet for Health and Family Services Secretary Adam Meier wrote in a statement that the state will work with the federal agency, the Department for Health and Human Services, to address that single issue: how the waiver might affect health coverage.

“Without prompt implementation of Kentucky HEALTH, we will have no choice but to make significant benefit reductions,” Meier wrote of the new plan in a statement.

Both Bevin and Meier have previously said if the Medicaid changes were struck down, they would look at immediate benefit cuts to the Medicaid program, including cutting vision, dental and pharmacy benefits. State officials have also said they would look at rolling back Medicaid expansion in the state.

Copyright 2018 89.3 WFPL News Louisville

Lisa Gillespie is WFPL's Health and Innovation Reporter. Most recently, she was a reporter for Kaiser Health News. During her career, Gillespie has covered all things health — from Medicaid and Medicare payment policy and rural hospital closures to science funding and the dietary supplement market.