November 20, 1997
Prepared by Jane Perkins, Lourdes Rivera, and Kristi Olson--National Health Law Program Abigail English and Catherine Teare--National Center for Youth Law

The Medicaid program, through its Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT) benefit package, requires states to provide comprehensive preventive, acute, and chronic care services for low-income children who are eligible for Medicaid. The benefit extends to one in four children in the United States.

The promise of Medicaid's EPSDT program to benefit children and adolescents is once again being tested. Two parts of the recent federal Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 (P.L. 105-33) particularly concern EPSDT:

The BBA authorizes each state to implement a "State Children's Health Insurance Program," to provide health insurance to uninsured children and makes federal funds available to do so. States have the option of expanding their Medicaid programs (and thus extending EPSDT benefits to more children) or creating new health insurance options (in which the benefit package can be based on EPSDT).(1)

The BBA calls for a study of the EPSDT program to be conducted by the Secretary of HHS, in consultation with Governors, State Medicaid directors, the American Academy of Actuaries, and representatives of provider and beneficiary organizations. The legislation authorizes a broad look at EPSDT, to include an examination of the actuarial value of treatment services. The study is to be completed within a year from enactment of the BBA. (2)

This issue brief provides snap shots of the EPSDT benefit which help to explain why the program is a key element in providing necessary health care for low-income children.(3)

EPSDT Snap Shots


EPSDT benefits are comprehensive in scope and are based on the physical, mental, and developmental needs of children.


Poor children have the greatest need for the comprehensive EPSDT benefits but can least afford them.


The Medicaid program, including the EPSDT benefit, plays a critical role for children living in poverty by increasing their access to health services.


Children are not the Medicaid program's "big ticket" items.

Of the small percentage of expenditures for children, the costs are disproportionately attributable to caring for newborns--needs that can be reduced with adequate prenatal care.


EPSDT provides dependable federal funding for services that states are already obliged to provide to children with disabilities.


EPSDT services are effective. CONCLUSION

Early and periodic screening is essential to identifying childhood illnesses before they worsen. The EPSDT benefit package can work to identify health problem early and to correct and ameliorate illnesses and conditions that are diagnosed during the screen. Society must decide what value it places on children's and adolescents' health, broadly defined, and whether to provide a comprehensive set of health benefits designed to promote the health of children and adolescents. Congress, federal agencies, states, insurance carriers, health care providers, advocates, families, and individuals all have a role to play in determining the future of EPSDT.

State Medicaid programs should work to improve the delivery of EPSDT benefits to children and adolescents. And, state child health insurance programs should adopt a benefits package that is as close to EPSDT as possible.

The National Health Law Program and the National Center for Youth Law have just published a joint issue of Health Advocate and Youth Law News that analyzes the Medicaid and State Children's Health Insurance Program provisions of the BBA. The National Health Law Program has received funding from The Annie E. Casey Foundation to report on the states' implementation of EPSDT. A state-by-state report will be issued in February 1998. We also are working with the University of North Carolina School of Social Work to develop a teaching module on EPSDT and Managed Care, which will be available early next year. The National Center for Youth Law has been conducting an "EPSDT Implementation Project" funded by The California Wellness Foundation. Both organization are collaborating on a project, Adolescent Health Care in Transition: Medicaid, Managed Care, and Health Care Reform, funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

We will continue to make available periodic updates on child health insurance and Medicaid issues. Please keep us informed about activities in your state, and let us know how we can help.


End Notes:

1. BBA, § 4901-4923, 111 Stat. 251 (creating a new Title XXI of the Social Security Act).

2. BBA, § 4744.

3. For a detailed analysis of the EPSDT program, see Jane Perkins and Susan Zinn, Toward a Healthy Future -- Ensuring Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment for Poor Children (April 1995) (available from the National Health Law Program's Los Angeles office).

4. Elizabeth Wehr and Elizabeth J. Jameson, Beyond Benefits: The Importance of a Pediatric Standard in Private Insurance Contracts to Ensuring Health Care Access for Children, 4 The Future of Children 115 (Winter 1994).

5. Haggerty, RJ, Child Health 2000: New Pediatrics in a Changing Environment of Children's Needs in the 21st Century, 96 Pediatrics 804 (Oct. 1995).

6. Clinical studies documenting these problems are cited in Newacheck, et al., The Effect on Children of Curtailing Medicaid Spending, 274 JAMA 1468 (Nov. 8, 1995).

7. U.S. Dep't of Health and Human Services Nat'l Ctr. for Health Stat., Health United States: 1995 (May 1996); Children's Defense Fund, The State of America's Children: 1997 (1997).

8. Chernoff, et al., Assessing the Health Status of Children Entering Foster Care, 93 Pediatrics 594 (April 1994).

9. Newacheck, et al., The Effect on Children of Curtailing Medicaid Spending, 274 JAMA 1468 (Nov. 8, 1995).

10. Newacheck, et al., The Effect on Children of Curtailing Medicaid Spending, 274 JAMA 1468 (Nov. 8, 1995).

11. HHS Office of Inspector General, Medicaid Managed Care and EPSDT at 1 (May 1997).

12. Kaiser Commission on the Future of Medicaid, Medicaid's Role for Children (May 1997).

13. Kaiser Commission on the Future of Medicaid, Medicaid's Role for Children (May 1997).

14. Newacheck, et al., The Effect on Children of Curtailing Medicaid Spending, 274 JAMA 1468 (Nov. 8, 1995).

15. HCFA, EPSDT Program Indicators (FY 1993). We can provide you with the state-specific information.

16. Committee to Study the Prevention of Low Birthweight, Division of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Institute of Medicine, Preventing Low Birthweight (1985: National Academy Press, Washington, DC).

17. Steve Berman, M.D., American Academy of Pediatrics, in A Pediatric Perspective of Medical Necessity, 151 Arch. Pediatr. Adolesc. Med. 858 (Aug. 1997).

18. U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment, Healthy Children: Investing in the Future (Feb. 1988).

19. Wagner, et al., Insurance Coverage for Preventive Immunizations in Childhood, 326 New Eng. J. Med. 768 (March 12, 1992).

20. American Academy of Pediatrics, Your Child's Eyes (1993).

21. Ackerman, Benefits of Preventive Programs in Eye Care are Visible on the Bottom Line, 15 Diabetes Care 580 (April 1992).

22. National Health Law Program, EPSDT Chart Book (forthcoming Feb. 1998).

23. Acs, et al. Effects on Nursing Caries on Body Weight in a Pediatric Population, 14 Pediatric Dentistry 302 (1992); Johnson, The Role of the Pediatrician in Identifying and Treating Dental Caries, 38 Pediatric Clinics of N. America 1173 (1991).

24. National Health Law Program, EPSDT Chart Book (forthcoming Feb. 1998).

25. National Committee for Quality Assurance, HEDIS 3.0 (Jan. 1997).

26. Nativio, et al., A Team Approach to Delivery of EPSDT Services in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Schools, 65 J. of School Health 38 (Jan. 1995).

27. Kay, et al., Process, Costs and Outcomes of Community-Based Prenatal Care for Adolescents, 29 Medical Care 531 (June 1991).

28. Keller, Study of Selected Outcomes of the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment Program in Michigan, 98 Pub. Health Reports 110 (March-April 1983)(summarizing study results).

29. Irwin and Conroy-Hughes, EPSDT Impact on Health Status: Estimates Based on Secondary Analysis of Administratively Generated Data, 20 Medical Care 216 (Feb. 1982).

30. National Governors' Association, Caring for Children 8 (1991).