Findings from Hilltop Study of Using Tax Forms to Identify Medicaid/CHIP-Eligible Children Released
The State Health Access Reform Evaluation (SHARE) has just released an issue brief entitled Using Information from Income Tax Forms to Target Medicaid and Chip Outreach: Preliminary Results of the Maryland Kids First Act. The brief discusses the preliminary results of Hilltop’s evaluation of the outreach effort of Maryland’s Kids First Act. Maryland is one of the first states in the country to use information from state income tax forms to identify and enroll Medicaid and CHIP-eligible children. As a result of this innovative approach, SHARE commissioned the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and its partner, The Hilltop Institute, to evaluate the outreach strategy. Hilltop Director of Medicaid Policy Studies David Idala, M. A., is principal investigator and research team leader. The brief identifies ten lessons learned from the experience so far, addressing issues such as data-sharing, health literacy, inclusion/exclusion criteria, tracking mechanisms, and the circumstances under which legislation is necessary in order to implement tax-based outreach. The project is funded by SHARE, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation®, with direction by the State Health Access Data Assistance Center at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. To view the brief, click here.
October 6, 2009