Report: Michigan wasted millions on deceased Medicaid enrollees
Michigan made $39.9 million in Medicaid payments to deceased enrollees over a two-year period a decade ago, with a total of $249 million spent across 14 states.
This is according to a new report titled the “Welfare Walking Dead” from the non-profit the Foundation for Government Accountability, which looked at federal audit data from the Office of Inspector General, among other research.
In an exclusive interview with The Center Square, Jonathan Bain said that every taxpayer should be concerned with these findings. Bain is a senior research fellow at the FGA and authored the report.
“The average citizen should care about these findings because it’s yet another example of government waste that’s rooted in inefficiency and lack of care and precision,” Bain explained. “Every dollar that is lost to waste, fraud, or abuse is a dollar that cannot be spent to benefit the truly needy—folks like pregnant women, low-income kids, or seniors.”
Of the 14 states the audit looked at, the report found that Michigan reported one of the highest amounts of Medicaid payments to the deceased. States that surpassed it included California at $70.9 million and Ohio at $51.3 million.
Other states, including ones with much higher populations than Michigan, reported much lower Medicaid payments to the deceased. That included Florida at $26.2 million and Illinois at $4.6 million.
Bain said there is action that states can take to ensure fraud is not happening.
“States have the tools to identify these deceased enrollees,” he said. “The issue is that they either aren’t doing the proper cross checks to discover them, or their Medicaid Management Information Systems aren’t being updated to reflect that a deceased enrollee has been flagged.”
The report found that most of the states audited did not routinely enter death information into their Medicaid Management Information Systems.
In Michigan, this led to about $39.9 million in Medicaid payments being made to managed care organizations on behalf of people who were already deceased. This was just during the two-year period the 2023 audit looked at, from 2014 to 2016. The audit gathered data from the 14 states over different periods, from 2009 to 2019, to obtain a large sample of national information.
Of that nearly $40 million in Michigan, the federal government paid about $27.5 million, while Michigan paid the rest.
According to Bain, these managed care organizations are contracted with by the state to deliver health services for a portion of their Medicaid population. The state then pays each organization a fixed, per-member monthly rate. That means that, once someone is enrolled, the plan gets paid that amount regardless of how many services the person actually uses.
However, Bain emphasized that the issue wasn’t rooted entirely in the payment model, but in a deeper administrative failure.
“The main issue wasn’t the payment structure itself,” Bain said, “It was that Michigan’s Medicaid system failed to flag these individuals as deceased, even though the state had access to both state and federal death-record data.”
While the audit examined data that is now nearly a decade old, Bain thinks the problem with waste, fraud, and abuse in taxpayer-funded welfare programs like Medicaid has likely only grown nationally.
The FGA report highlighted how, over the past decade, it is estimated that there has been $1.1 trillion in improper payments. That means that upwards of one out of every five dollars Medicaid pays out is improper, not to mention that nearly 85% of Medicaid’s enrollment increases over the last decade were able-bodied adults.
Following the release of the federal audit, Michigan acknowledged that Medicaid payments were made for deceased individuals and that the state did not receive reimbursement, even once the date of death was entered. It said it would begin to seek reimbursement going forward and that it would “develop processes to ensure that dates of death” are added into its MMIS system.
Still, Bain explained there are further steps that states like Michigan should take to mitigate these mistakes and preserve its “limited” taxpayer dollars for the “truly needy.”
“Regularly cross-checking Medicaid enrollment against state and federal databases is an effective first step,” he said. “But equally as importantly is taking immediate action if a discrepancy is flagged . . . the problem wasn’t a lack of data—it was that the state wasn’t using the information.”
Community Events
Latest News Stories
Will County Eyes Major Overhaul to Consolidate Scattered Government Offices
Sheriff’s Office Reports Crime Down 10%, Cites Body Cam Footage as Main Challenge of Safety Act
Will County Considers Moving Land Use Public Hearings Away from Full Board Meetings
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Jackson Township Board for August 13, 2025
Jackson Township to Investigate Decade-Old High-Speed Rail Plan Through Elwood
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan Park Board for August 14, 2025
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board for September 18, 2025
Jackson Township Approves Settlement with Joliet, Union Pacific Over ICC Case
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Board of Education for September 18, 2025
Manhattan Park Board Deadlocks on Paying for Sports Complex Plan, Motion Fails
Manhattan-Elwood Library Board Adopts Annual Budget and Appropriation Ordinance
Lincoln-Way 210 to Launch District Literacy Plan, Expands Community Partnerships