Medicaid waivers allow states to operate their Medicaid programs differently from standard federal rules. These rules include who is covered, what benefits are provided, how services are delivered, and comparability requirements based on waiver type. Medicaid Section 1115 waivers, also known as demonstration waivers, were created in 1962 via amendments to the Social Security Act. These waivers can be used to test new innovative services, programs, and models for Medicaid programs. Medicaid Section 1915(b) waivers, also known as care management waivers, was enacted in 1981 as a part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (P.L. 97-35). These . . .

Want To Read More? Log In Or Become A Paid Member
Resource Available For Paid OPEN MINDS Circle Members Only
Not a paid member? Don't miss out! Sign up today and receive unlimited organizational access to all OPEN MINDS strategic advice, market intelligence, and management best practices – over 250,000 resources!
If you are already a paid member, log in to your account to access this resource and more. If you are a free member, you will need to upgrade to a paid membership before accessing this resource.

If you are not yet a paid member, learn more about the OPEN MINDS Circle Market Intelligence Service Membership on our website, reach out to our team at info@openminds.com, or call us at 877-350-6463.

Market Intel Reports

Get in-depth market analyses and landscape assessments with our comprehensive market research reports on complex consumer markets. Our market intel reports provide a broad range of critical information. Most notable is our series of reports on market size in the complex consumer domains — including total spending on mental health, addiction services, child welfare and foster care services, children’s services, juvenile justice, autism, I/DD services, long-term care, corrections health care, and more.

Filter Options

  • By Market
  • By Topic
  • By Date Range
  • Sort Date By
  • Results Per Page
Clear Filters