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Medica won’t bid on Medicaid in Iowa
Michaela Ramm
Jan. 11, 2018 4:49 pm
Medica Health Plans will not bid to become an administrator of Medicaid plans in Iowa, a spokesperson told The Gazette this week.
Greg Bury, spokesman for the Minnesota-based insurance company, told The Gazette the company would not bid to become the third managed-care organization in the state's Medicaid program.
'We just collected information about what the state was looking to do,” Bury said.
The state's program previously had three managed-care organizations administering plans for Medicaid recipients. AmeriHealth Caritas left the state at the beginning of this year.
Medicaid enrollees' choice of insurer was further limited when Amerigroup Iowa - one of the two remaining Medicaid administrators - announced in November it did not have capacity to take on new members. Those who were not moved to the state's fee-for-service system were placed with the remaining insurer, UnitedHealthcare.
The Department of Human Services posted a request for proposals at the end of October to find another Medicaid administrator, which would be available to enrollees beginning July 1, 2019.
In a notice posted by DHS on Nov. 22, the department listed Medica as an entity intending to bid in the first round.
However, Bury said, Medica 'never entered into formally making a bid for it.”
The Nov. 22 DHS notice also lists Iowa Total Care - a subsidiary of Centene Corporation - as posting an intent to bid.
Medica is currently the only insurer on the exchange for individual plans.
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