Home / News / CMS Finalizes Rule to Standardize Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment & Renewals

Photo: A clinician, wearing a mask and shield, examining a young patient with their parent in the background wearing a mask.
Photo: A clinician, wearing a mask and shield, examining a young patient with their parent in the background.

Via AAP.org and AHA.org: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) March 27 finalized a rule proposed in 2022 to standardize Medicaid and CHIP enrollment and renewal processes and make it easier for eligible children and adults to stay covered. According to CMS, the final rule eliminates CHIP waiting periods, annual and lifetime coverage limits and the practice of locking children out of coverage if a family is unable to pay premiums; improves the transfer of children from Medicaid to CHIP when a family’s income rises; gives individuals at least 15 days to provide additional information when applying for the first time and 30 days to return documentation when renewing coverage; prohibits conducting renewals more often than every 12 months; and prohibits in-person interviews for older adults and those with disabilities. The rule takes effect 60 days after publication in the April 2 Federal Register.

According to a report released March 27 by the Department of Health and Human Services, the continuous eligibility requirements that Congress passed in December 2022 could protect as many as 17 million children from coverage disruptions. The requirements took effect this Jan. 1.

For additional information, please visit the CMS Newsroom

Image of The American Academy of Pediatrics logo.Photo from 2023 Research Day of researchers standing next to each other during a poster presentation.