POLICY PRIORITIES:

THE CHALLENGE:

ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL

BILL ACT

The One Big Beautiful Bill

Act represents the most

 significant restructuring

of Medicaid financing since

 the Affordable Care Act.

For autism and ABA service

 providers — who serve

 hundreds of thousands of

 children through Medicaid

 — the implications are

 profound and immediate.

 

 

KEY CONCERNS

FOR AUTISM

PROVIDERS

THE FINANCIAL

 SQUEEZE:

 

The One Big Beautiful Bill

Act cuts over $1 trillion

from federal Medicaid

funding over the next decade -

 forcing states to find

savings wherever they can.

ABA services have become a

 primary target, with states

 implementing rate cuts,

therapy caps, and tighter

 eligibility requirements to

 balance their budgets.

STATE RATE CUTS:

 

Facing unprecedented budget

 shortfalls, states across the

 country are slashing ABA

 reimbursement rates. These

cuts threaten provider

 sustainability - forcing some

 organizations to exit Medicaid

 entirely - and reduce access

to care for the children and

 families who depend on

these services.

THERAPY HOUR CAPS:

 

To control costs, states are

 implementing lifetime and

weekly caps on ABA therapy

hours. These arbitrary limits

 ignore clinical evidence and

 medical necessity, forcing

families to ration care or go

 without the intensive

treatment their children need.

MCO NETWORK

 PRESSURE:

 

Managed care organizations

are absorbing financial

pressure from states by

 terminating provider

contracts, proposing

significant rate reductions,

and tightening their networks.

 Leading ABA providers are

being pushed out of MCO

networks, leaving families

with fewer options and longer

wait times.

ADMINISTRATIVE BURDENS:

 

New prior authorization

 requirements, pre- and post

-payment reviews, and stricter

 documentation demands are

 delaying care and increasing

costs for providers. These

 administrative barriers add

 complexity without improving

 outcomes - and ultimately hurt

 the children waiting for

treatment.

COVERAGE

 DISRUPTIONS:

 

Work requirements, shortened

 redetermination cycles, and

 tighter eligibility rules will

create constant eligibility

churn for Medicaid families.

When a parent loses coverage -

even temporarily - their child's

 autism treatment is disrupted,

 undermining months or years

of therapeutic progress.

 

OUR ADVOCACY

PRIORITIES

Protecting

Medicaid Access

 

We advocate for policies that

 maintain and strengthen

Medicaid coverage for children

with autism, including

exemptions from work

requirements for caregivers of

 children with disabilities,

 reasonable redetermination

 timelines, and protections

against coverage gaps that

disrupt treatment.

 

Fair

Reimbursement

Rates

 

Autism and ABA services

require highly trained

professionals and intensive

therapy hours. We fight for

 reimbursement rates that

reflect the true cost of

delivering high-quality care,

ensuring providers can maintain

 sustainable operations while

serving Medicaid populations.

 

Network

Adequacy

Standards

 

Medicaid managed care

 organizations must maintain

 adequate provider networks to

 ensure timely access to autism

 services. We advocate for

 enforceable network adequacy

 standards that hold MCOs

 accountable for providing the

 access their members deserve.

 

Administrative

 Simplification

 

Excessive prior authorization

 requirements, documentation

 burdens, and administrative

barriers delay care for children

with autism. We push for

streamlined processes that

prioritize patient access over

 bureaucratic complexity

 

State-Level

 Implementation

 

Federal legislation is

implemented at the state level

— and every state is different.

We provide state-by-state

advocacy support to ensure that

 implementation decisions

protect autism services and

the families who depend on

them.