Showing posts with label Medicaid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medicaid. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2014

Fertile ground for Medicaid pitch- The Washington Post

Remote Area Medical back in western Virginia, as the battle to expand Medicaid rolls on…

The three-day clinic, which relies on more than 1,000 volunteers, will serve as many as 3,000 people before it ends Sunday. The vast majority of patients — more than 70 percent — come for dental care, Brock said.

Every year, hundreds of people have every one of their teeth pulled there. Then they put their names into a denture lottery, with the hope of being picked to get a set of false teeth made for them at the next year’s event. Forty-six people were picked from a list of 700 to get dentures this year.

“They pull thousands of teeth here. At the end, they’ll have buckets of teeth,” said volunteer Jennifer Lee, Virginia’s deputy secretary of health and human resources and an emergency room doctor.

Medicaid expansion would not fully alleviate the dental situation. Medicaid does not cover routine dental care for adults or dentures. But Medicaid does pay for emergency tooth extractions, so patients would not have to wait a year to have a bad one pulled.

“I just had an 18-year-old have a full mouth extraction because she’s never had dental care,” said Beth Bortz, who runs the Virginia Center for Health Innovation. “It’s not unusual.”

She said patients often want their good teeth removed, too, because they associate teeth with pain. She said health-care providers counsel them to keep them.

- The Washington Post

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Monday, May 26, 2014

Hospitals wounded by politics - Opinion - The Times-Tribune

 

Scranton’s three hospitals are among more than one-third of hospitals statewide that lost money in 2013. More than half of the state’s hospitals had profit margins lower than 4 percent for the year, the threshold for sustainability according to the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council.

It’s a trend that likely will continue statewide through 2014 and beyond unless the Corbett administration abandons its politically inspired resistance to the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid.

The losses have multiple causes, but one key driver is the rising cost of uncompensated care — treatment for patients who have no private or public insurance and cannot pay.

According to the council, known as PHC4, Pennsylvania hospitals provided more than $1 billion in uncompensated care in 2013, a 5 percent increase over 2012.

Gov. Tom Corbett foolishly has rejected a portion of the federal health care law which, in other states that have accepted it, has begun to diminish levels of uncompensated care and provide hospitals with much-needed revenue.

Under the ACA, the federal government pays 100 percent of the cost of Medicaid expansion to cover uninsured low-income workers in the first two years and covers 90 percent of the cost thereafter.

It’s an extraordinary deal for states. In Pennsylvania, it would have pumped about $17 billion into the health care economy through 2019, including about a $1.6 billion direct reduction in the amount of uncompensated care. That reduction likely would be higher because many people now receiving treatment at hospitals would have insurance enabling them to see other providers first.

Hospitals wounded by politics - Opinion - The Times-Tribune

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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Paper: Gov. Tom Corbett health plan would need 700 workers

 

HARRISBURG (AP) — Gov. Tom Corbett’s Healthy PA, an alternative to expanding Medicaid, will require the state to hire more than 700 new employees, a newspaper reported Monday.

The figure was far higher than most states have experienced and came as a surprise to some experts in public policy, The Philadelphia Inquirer said.

Most of the new hires would be caseworkers in offices scattered around the state, said Bev Mackereth, Corbett’s public welfare secretary. She said that under Pennsylvania’s system, the caseworkers do more than in some other states, including evaluating those who sign up for potential eligibility for other benefits as well.

She said in an interview Monday that Pennsylvania also trails some other states in automation, which adds to the cost.

“We’re getting there, and we’re not where other states are,” she said. “Some states have everything automated — it’s very easy for them to do.”

The newspaper said the state has estimated about 605,000 people would be newly eligible under Healthy PA. The first-year cost of the 700-plus new hires will be just over $30 million, much of it subsidized by the federal government.

Mackereth said the additional personnel costs would be more than covered by the estimated Healthy PA savings of $125 million.

The Department of Public Welfare estimates it would require even more new workers — about 1,200 of them — to expand Medicaid under the President Barack Obama’s landmark health care law.

Corbett, a Republican seeking a second term this year, is waiting to hear back from federal regulators about Healthy PA. It would use Medicaid expansion money to provide private insurance coverage for the same group of people. Those private insurers would be able to operate without some of Medicaid’s coverage rules.

Paper: Gov. Tom Corbett health plan would need 700 workers

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Friday, January 24, 2014

Pennsylvania isn't serious about expanding Medicaid. How do we know? - latimes.com

 

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett has lately been getting credit in the political press for being one of those Republican governors coming around on the expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. Advocates for the underprivileged can't understand why.

They're right to wonder. Corbett's "Healthy Pennsylvania" plan, which was released for public comment this week, is a sham. It would reduce health benefits for many of his neediest citizens and impose punitive conditions on their coverage. It requires waiver approval from the federal government that's almost certain to be refused, because some of its provisions are in flagrant violation of federal law. And even if it were approved, Corbett waited so long to put his plan together that it probably couldn't be implemented until 2015. In the meantime, 500,000 of his citizens will be medically uncovered.

"He's being very disingenuous," says Joan Alker, executive director of the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University. "He knows a lot of this proposal is not approvable" under federal law.

Corbett's proposal shows that many Republicans still aren't done posturing with their citizens' lives, even as some have done the right thing--among them Gov. John Kasich of Ohio and Jan Brewer of Arizona. Some GOP governors, like Rick Perry of Texas and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, seem determined to take their neediest citizens all the way down--they're not budging on their refusal to expand Medicaid coverage.

Corbett wants to have it both ways. He intends to masquerade as a feeling governor intent on bringing healthcare to the masses at practical cost. But beneath the fancy dress lies a cynical politician who knows his plan isn't practical. If it gets rejected he'll blame the Obama administration. "We tried," he'll say. "But they blocked us." Don't be taken in.

Pennsylvania isn't serious about expanding Medicaid. How do we know? - latimes.com

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Saturday, November 23, 2013

I Watched My Patients Die of Treatable Diseases Because They Were Poor | Alternet

 

There’s a popular myth that the uninsured—in Texas, that’s 25 percent of us—can always get medical care through emergency rooms. Ted Cruz has argued that it is “much cheaper to provide emergency care than it is to expand Medicaid,” and Rick Perry has claimed that Texans prefer the ER system. The myth is based on a 1986 federal law called the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), which states that hospitals with emergency rooms have to accept and stabilize patients who are in labor or who have an acute medical condition that threatens life or limb. That word “stabilize” is key: Hospital ERs don’t have to treat you. They just have to patch you up to the point where you’re not actively dying. Also, hospitals charge for ER care, and usually send patients to collections when they cannot pay.

My patient went to the ER, but didn’t get treatment. Although he was obviously sick, it wasn’t an emergency that threatened life or limb. He came back to St. Vincent’s, where I went through my routine: conversation, vital signs, physical exam. We laughed a lot, even though we both knew it was a bad situation.

One night, a friend called to say that my patient was in the hospital. He’d finally gotten so anemic that he couldn’t catch his breath, and the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), where I am a student, took him in. My friend emailed me the results of his CT scans: There was cancer in his kidney, his liver and his lungs. It must have been spreading over the weeks that he’d been coming into St. Vincent’s.

I went to visit him that night. “There’s my doctor!” he called out when he saw me. I sat next to him, and he explained that he was waiting to call his sister until they told him whether or not the cancer was “bad.”

“It might be one of those real treatable kinds of cancers,” he said. I nodded uncomfortably. We talked for a while, and when I left he said, “Well now you know where I am, so you can come visit me.”

I never came back. I was too ashamed, and too early in my training to even recognize why I felt that way. After all, I had done everything I could—what did I have to feel ashamed of?

UTMB sent him to hospice, and he died at home a few months later. I read his obituary in the Galveston County Daily News.

I Watched My Patients Die of Treatable Diseases Because They Were Poor | Alternet

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Saturday, October 26, 2013

Obamacare meets extra resistance in Oklahoma - Page 2 - Los Angeles Times

The cognitive dissonance should make these people’s heads explode, but I don’t think there’s enough cognition to create the dissonance.

In dozens of interviews here, many said they feared they would be forced to buy insurance they couldn't afford. Some said they were told (erroneously) that insurance penalties would come out of their Social Security checks; others said they'd heard the law meant they'd soon have to travel several hundred miles to see a doctor.

"They say it's affordable, but when you ain't got no money, nothing's affordable," said 55-year-old Paul Bush of Midwest City, who accompanied his sister to a clinic for care last week. While he supports efforts in Congress to kill the program — "Heck yeah," he said — he wasn't happy about Fallin's decision to reject the Medicaid expansion: "The state could really have used the money."

Bush's sister, Teresa Springer, might have qualified for care under a Medicaid expansion, but she supported Fallin's decision.

Springer, who has applied for disability assistance, said she worried that fines related to the healthcare law would cut into her disability checks at the same time that some Republicans in Congress were talking about cutting food stamps.

"That's all I have," she said after a visit to the Mary Mahoney Memorial Health Center in Spencer, Okla. "I'm going to either pay my bills or not eat." The law, she added, "is hurting everybody."

Obamacare meets extra resistance in Oklahoma - Page 2 - Los Angeles Times

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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Uninsured in Pennsylvania reaches record high - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

 

Overall the number of uninsured Pennsylvanians increased by 11 percent from 2011 to 2012, while nationally the number decreased by 1.4 percent.

The numbers, based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, reflect a troubling trend in health care insurance, which people traditionally received through their employer.

"We continue to see a dangerous erosion of employer-based coverage," said Andy Carter, president and CEO of the Hospital and Healthsystem Association that represents the interests of nearly 240 health facilities.

"The number of Pennsylvanians covered by private, employer-based plans hit an all-time low of 59.5 percent in 2012," he said.

And that's not solely because people are out of work, he added.

"Three out of every 4 uninsured Pennsylvanians live in a household with at least one working adult, and nearly 4 out of 5 live in Pennsylvania's suburban and rural regions," Mr. Carter said.

The association has advocated for the expansion of Medicaid as outlined under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Uninsured in Pennsylvania reaches record high - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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Monday, September 30, 2013

APPRISE: Older Adult Health Insurance Counseling, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania


Older Adult Health Insurance Counseling
APPRISE
APPRISE 412-661-1438 or APPRISE@fswp.org
APPRISE offices are open Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
SeniorLine 412-350-5460, toll-free 1-800-344-4319, TTY 412-350-2727 or SeniorLine@alleghenycounty.us
APPRISE is a free health insurance counseling program designed to help Pennsylvanians, age 60 years and older. APPRISE volunteer counselors are specially trained to answer consumer questions and offer education about Medicare, HMOs, long-term care insurance, supplemental insurance, and Medicaid benefits. APPRISE services are free, objective and completely confidential.
APPRISE counselors are available to assist an individual in the following ways:
  • Determine if a Medicare HMO is right for the individual by explaining the way Medicare HMOs work.
  • Understand Medicare benefits by explaining what services are covered under Medicare Parts A and B and the Medicare Summary Notice.
  • Select a Medigap insurance policy by explaining the benefits in each plan and providing a list of companies that sell these plans.
  • Obtain assistance to pay for prescription drugs through government and private programs that offer this service, and explain the eligibility requirements and how to apply.
  • Find government programs that will pay Medicare deductibles, co-payments, and Part B premiums and assist consumers with the paperwork.
  • Understand long-term care by explaining eligibility requirements for government long-term care programs and explaining private long-term care insurance and how to select the best policy.
APPRISE services are free and all information is kept completely confidential. To contact a counselor, contact the APPRISE coordinator at 412-661-1438 or APPRISE@fswp.org. For general information on this and other services for older adults, you may contact the DHS AAA SeniorLine at 412-350-5460, toll-free 1-800-344-4319, TTY 412-350-2727 or SeniorLine@alleghenycounty.us.
Pennsylvania Health Law Project (PHLP)
PHLP 1-800-274-3258 works to overcome barriers to accessing health care coverage and services. They provide:
Health Insurance Coverage, Department of Human Services, Allegheny County

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Friday, September 27, 2013

Kasich makes faith argument for Medicaid | The Columbus Dispatch

 

Talking to reporters, Kasich pleaded for legislators to approve the expansion.

“The most-important thing for this legislature to think about: Put yourself in somebody else’s shoes. Put yourself in the shoes of a mother and a father of an adult child that is struggling. Walk in somebody else’s moccasins. Understand that poverty is real.”

Kasich continued: “I had a conversation with one of the members of the legislature the other day. I said, ‘I respect the fact that you believe in small government. I do, too. I also know that you’re a person of faith.

‘Now, when you die and get to the meeting with St. Peter, he’s probably not going to ask you much about what you did about keeping government small. But he is going to ask you what you did for the poor. You better have a good answer.’ ”

Kasich makes faith argument for Medicaid | The Columbus Dispatch

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Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Michigan's Approach to Medicaid Expansion and Reform — NEJM

 

Five core principles are evident in Michigan's approach to expanding and reforming Medicaid under the ACA. First, the state must achieve sufficient savings to offset its contributions for the Medicaid expansion when federal funding drops from 100% to 95% in 2017 and to 90% in 2021. Medicaid coverage of some state-financed health services, including mental health and prison health programs, is expected to result in approximately $200 million in savings for the state budget in 2014. If the state's costs are not offset by such savings, Michigan will withdraw from the Medicaid expansion in 2017 or later years. But current projections indicate that the state's cumulative savings should cover the additional costs through 2027.5

Second, Michigan will introduce financial incentives for new Medicaid enrollees to control their use of health care services and to maintain healthy behaviors. For 150,000 new enrollees with incomes between 100% and 133% of the federal poverty level, cost sharing amounting to as much as 5% of their annual income (approximately $580 to $775 for a single adult) is slated to begin 6 months after Medicaid enrollment. After 48 months of Medicaid coverage, cost sharing for these new enrollees will increase to 7% of their annual income, or they can choose to enroll in subsidized private insurance offered through the state's health insurance exchange. A system resembling health savings accounts will be created for individuals or their employers to deposit funds to cover copayments for health care services. Cost sharing can be reduced to 2% of annual income for new enrollees who demonstrate that they engage in healthy behaviors.

Third, the state will enroll newly eligible adults in private health plans rather than in traditional fee-for-service Medicaid. Health plans will be eligible for financial bonuses for effectively managing enrollee cost sharing required by the state and for achieving cost and quality targets. Health plans will also be directed to implement value-based insurance design by varying cost sharing according to the clinical value of services provided.

Fourth, Michigan's new law addresses health care delivery by requiring that new enrollees have access to primary care and preventive services. New enrollees will also be offered the opportunity to complete advance directives for end-of-life care when they enroll in Medicaid — part of a broader state initiative to encourage residents to express their preferences regarding end-of-life care.

Fifth, Michigan's new Medicaid law enhances the state's capacity to monitor the costs and quality of health care. The Department of Community Health, which oversees the Medicaid program, will assess opportunities for improving the Medicaid program and make Medicaid data available to outside vendors that can help participating health plans to pursue innovations in the program. The Department of Insurance and Financial Services will evaluate the effect of the Medicaid expansion on private insurance premiums in the state; some reduction in these premiums is anticipated.3,5 A new Health Care Cost and Quality Advisory Committee will be created to promote greater transparency with respect to the costs and quality of care.

Michigan's Approach to Medicaid Expansion and Reform — NEJM

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Monday, September 23, 2013

Primary Payer Status Affects Mortality for Major Surgical Operations

This is the famous “Medicaid is worse than no insurance” study. It’s worth jumping to the full study and reading the Discussion section, as the authors do a pretty good job of pointing out why Medicaid patients, like the uninsured, are so darn sick and do so poorly in the health system. But, it does not say what they (the Right) think it says!

CONCLUSION

In this study, we conclude that Medicaid and Uninsured payer status confers increased risk adjusted in-hospital mortality compared with Private Insurance for major surgical operations in the United States. Medicaid is further associated with higher postoperative in-hospital complications as well as the greatest adjusted length of stay and total costs despite risk factors or the specific major operation. These differences serve as an important proxy for larger socioeconomic and health system-related issues that could be targeted to improve surgical outcomes for US patients.
Primary Payer Status Affects Mortality for Major Surgical Operations

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What is Medicaid’s Impact on Access to Care, Health Outcomes, and Quality of Care? Setting the Record Straight on the Evidence – Issue Brief | The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation


Finding #1:  Having Medicaid is much better than being uninsured.

Consistently, research indicates that people with Medicaid coverage fare much better than their uninsured counterparts on diverse measures of access to care, utilization, and unmet need. A large body of evidence shows that, compared to low-income uninsured children, children enrolled in Medicaid are significantly more likely to have a usual source of care (USOC) and to receive well-child care, and significantly less likely to have unmet or delayed needs for medical care, dental care, and prescription drugs due to costs.3 4 5 6
The research findings on adults generally mirror the patterns for children. A synthesis of the literature on the impact of Medicaid expansions for pregnant women concluded, “…the weight of evidence is that expansions led to modest improvements in prenatal care use, in terms of either earlier prenatal care or more adequate prenatal care, at least in some states and for some groups affected by the expansions.”7 Mothers covered by Medicaid are much more likely than low-income uninsured mothers to have a USOC, a doctor visit, and a dental visit, and to receive cancer screening services.8 Nonelderly adults covered by Medicaid are more likely than uninsured adults to report health care visits overall and visits for specific types of services; they are also more likely to report timely care and less likely to delay or go without needed medical care because of costs.9 Projections from a recent analysis show that, if Medicaid beneficiaries were instead uninsured, they would be significantly less likely to have a USOC and much more likely to have unmet health care needs; except for emergency department care, their use of key types of services would also drop significantly. At the same time, their out-of-pocket spending would increase dramatically – almost four-fold on average.10 Other research provides evidence of increased access to care and health care utilization for previously uninsured low-income adults who gain Medicaid coverage under state expansions of eligibility.11
Keep reading! (link below)
What is Medicaid’s Impact on Access to Care, Health Outcomes, and Quality of Care? Setting the Record Straight on the Evidence – Issue Brief | The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation

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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Uninsured in Texas and Florida - NYTimes.com

 

A new Census Bureau report documents the alarming percentages of people in Texas and Florida without health insurance. Leaders of both states should hang their heads in shame because they have been among the most resistant in the nation to providing coverage for the uninsured under the Affordable Care Act, the law that Republicans deride as “Obamacare.”

Uninsured in Texas and Florida - NYTimes.com

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Monday, June 10, 2013

Wendell Potter: A Rare Bipartisan Idea to Improve Medicaid and Save Money

 

The problem is referred to by policy wonks as "churn." Because of the way Medicaid is administered by the states, millions of Americans enrolled in the program lose coverage temporarily every year because of often minor fluctuations in their income or even a change of address. Many are removed from the rolls simply because they can't take time off from work to go to a Medicaid office to re-verify their incomes every three months, which some states require.

It's called churn because most people who are "disenrolled" -- to use insurance industry jargon -- are eventually reinstated. Their eligibility for Medicaid never changed. They lost coverage solely because of paperwork requirements or a slight and fleeting bump in pay from working overtime during a given week.

This is unknown in the private insurance world because once you enroll in a health plan, you can stay enrolled in that plan for a year, so long as you keep paying the premiums on time. It doesn't matter if you move from one street to another or work an extra shift to make a few extra bucks.

But staying covered for a full year under Medicaid is not a given, and the consequences of this churn are costly, and not just for those most directly affected. The situation is costly to taxpayers, too, because of the unnecessary administrative expense. It costs hundreds of dollars per enrollee to verify income multiple times a year and to process all the paperwork involved in reinstating a beneficiary. When you consider that 58 million of Americans are currently enrolled in Medicaid -- a number that will grow substantially next year when many states expand coverage under the Affordable Care Act -- billions of taxpayers' dollars are being wasted because of churn.

Those who fare the worst, though, are eligible beneficiaries who get dumped into the ranks of the uninsured.

"Even short gaps in coverage can lead to delay or avoidance of needed care," says Leighton Ku, director of the Center for Health Policy Research at George Washington University's School of Public Health and Human Services, who along with colleague Erika Steinmetz studied the effects of churn. They released their findings in a report last month.

Please read on…

Wendell Potter: A Rare Bipartisan Idea to Improve Medicaid and Save Money

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Public in Deep South supports expanding Medicaid, poll finds, but lawmakers don’t - KansasCity.com


WASHINGTON — Even though governors and lawmakers in five Deep South states oppose a plan to cover more people through Medicaid under the health care overhaul, 62 percent of the people in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina support expanding the program, according to a new poll.
The level of support for expanding Medicaid – the state and federal health insurance program for the poor and disabled – ranged from a low of 59 percent in Mississippi to a high of 65 percent in South Carolina, according to the poll by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a leading research and public policy think tank that focuses on African-Americans and other people of color.
Brian Smedley, director of the center’s health policy institute, said the findings show that lawmakers who are blocking Medicaid expansion in the five states are “out of step with their constituents.”
Public in Deep South supports expanding Medicaid, poll finds, but lawmakers don’t - KansasCity.com

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

PolitiFact Virginia | Pete Snyder says Medicaid causes higher risk of surgery death

PolitiFact Virginia | Pete Snyder says Medicaid causes higher risk of surgery death

This is the fact check on that VA Medicaid outcomes study that conservatives love to willfully misinterpret:

But researchers place little of the blame on Medicaid.
They noted that Medicaid recipients are the poorest, sickest and least educated group of patients. They are the least likely group to seek preventive health care. As a result, they are more likely to enter hospitals in dire conditions that require emergency surgery.
"Medicaid patients had the highest incidence of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, depression, liver disease, neurologic disorders and psychoses," the study said. "Furthermore, Medicaid patients had the highest incidence of metastatic cancer."
The researchers said that uninsured patients have similar characteristics to Medicaid recipients and that it is "plausible" that both groups may suffer from a "system bias" that limits their access to private hospitals and top physicians.
"For many surgical patients, private insurance status often allows for referral to expert surgeons for their disease," the study said. "Alternatively, Medicaid and uninsured patients may have been referred to less skilled and less specialized surgeons."
Does the research prove, as Snyder and other conservatives suggest, that it’s safer to be uninsured than on Medicaid? Ailawadi, co-author of the study, said it does not.

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Primary care still waiting on ACA Medicaid pay raise - amednews.com

If the states manage to screw this up, and prevent pay improvement for primary care, it could jeopardize the success of the ACA…

Washington Primary care physicians who qualify for higher Medicaid payments under the Affordable Care Act might not see these rate increases as quickly as anticipated this year.

The Medicaid program has had a long-standing reputation for paying doctors at rates far below what Medicare pays for the same services. The ACA aimed to address this problem by directing states to bump rates for primary care services provided by primary care doctors up to 100% of Medicare rates for calendar years 2013 and 2014. Because the final rule on the provision was issued in late 2012 with an effective date of Jan. 1, many family doctors were hoping to see an immediate boost in their claims payments. However, “there could be a lag of several months even from now” for the enhanced Medicaid rates to take effect, said Jeffrey Cain, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Some physician organizations are concerned that states are missing the opportunity to prop up primary care because they aren't moving quickly enough to pay these higher fees.

Several administrative steps are needed first at the state and federal levels, said Neil Kirschner, senior associate of regulatory and insurer affairs for the American College of Physicians. States have until March 31 to modify their Medicaid plans accordingly and submit those changes to the federal government, which then has an additional 90 days to approve the plans. “It's unclear how many states have done that,” he said.

In recent letters to the National Governors Assn. and the National Assn. of Medicaid Directors, the American Medical Association and other organizations representing primary care doctors called on states to enact the pay bump expeditiously and engage in active communication with physicians to notify them about the timing of the pay increase.

With the ACA provision in effect for only two years, any implementation delays will make it harder for the government to collect data to see if patient access is improving by raising Medicaid payments, Kirschner said. The longer states take, the longer physicians must wait for these enhanced payments, which could affect decisions whether to take new Medicaid patients, he said.

Primary care still waiting on ACA Medicaid pay raise - amednews.com

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Testimony for PA Senate Democratic Appropriations Committee Public Hearing on Medicaid Expansion, March 8, 2013

Good morning. Thank you for conducting this session and for inviting me to speak. I am Dr. Chris Hughes, state director for Doctors for America, a nation-wide group of physicians advocating for high quality, affordable health care for all. I have been an intensive care physician for my entire career, now approaching 25 years, and within the past year I have also begun practicing hospice and palliative medicine. I am a former Trustee of the Pennsylvania Medical Society and Chair of the Patient Safety Committee. I have completed graduate studies in health policy at Thomas Jefferson University, and I am now teaching there, in the Graduate School of Population Health.

I tell you this to let you know that I can get down in the weeds with you about the nuts and bolts of implementation of the Affordable Care Act, and I know a fair amount about health care financing, access, cost shifting, and all the rest. But you have fine panelists assembled here today who have been doing this for you, and I know you all know your way around these topics as well. That’s why you’re here.

I am here as a physician and a representative of my profession. Every doctor you know, and every nurse and pharmacist and social worker and everyone in the front lines of health care, for that matter, can tell you stories of how our health care system has failed someone. Our system fails people regularly, and often spectacularly, and often cruelly, day in, day out.

I've had patients who work full time in jobs that fall far short of the American dream. They get by, but they can't afford health insurance.

I'll give you a few of my patients’ stories here, not just to point out the obvious- that we are mistreating our fellow human beings – but that we are misspending countless dollars on the wrong end of the system.

There's the cabbie who recognizes his diabetes and determines to work harder and longer so he can buy insurance before he is stricken with the label even worse than diabetes: preexisting condition! He doesn't make it and ends up in the ICU with diabetic ketoacidosis.

There's the construction worker who has a controllable seizure disorder that goes uncontrolled because he can’t afford to go to the doctor. He ends up in the ICU, on a ventilator – life support - multiple times.

There's the woman who stays home to care for her dying mother and loses her insurance along with her job. When her mother is gone and she finally gets to a doctor for herself, her own cancer is far advanced. She goes on hospice herself.

The laid-off engineer whose cough turns bloody for months and months before he “accesses” the health care system – through the Emergency room and my ICU with already far advanced cancer.

Shona’s attendant, of course. [Shona Eakin, Executive Director of Voices for Independence, in her earlier testimony.]

These are people who are doing the right thing – working, caring for family members – and still have to go begging for health care. How many hours does an American have to work to “deserve” health care? 40? 50? 60? We, as a society, are telling these people that their work, their lives, are not valuable enough to deserve access to health care until they meet some standard of employment in a job that has health insurance.

While doing some research on Medicare cost savings, I ran across a paper from US Sen. Tom Coburn with this quote: "Medicaid is a particular burden on states, consuming on average 22 percent of state budgets." I don’t quibble with the number, I quibble with the mindset that leads one to think that the suffering of millions is a non-factor in the decision making. And the fate of patients is not mentioned in his paper.

Not long ago, expanding access to health care was a nonpartisan goal. As recently as 2007, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators, including Republicans Jim DeMint and Trent Lott, ( let me repeat that, “Jim DeMint and Trent Lott” ) wrote a letter to then-President George W. Bush pointing out that our health care system was in urgent need of repair. "Further delay is unacceptable as costs continue to skyrocket, our population ages and chronic illness increases. In addition, our businesses are at a severe disadvantage when their competitors in the global market get health care for 'free.' "

Their No. 1 priority? It was to "Ensure that all Americans would have affordable, quality, private health coverage, while protecting current government programs. We believe the health care system cannot be fixed without providing solutions for everyone. Otherwise, the costs of those without insurance will continue to be shifted to those who do have coverage."

Medicaid expansion and the Affordable Care Act will get us closer to this than at any time in our history.

You will hear some physicians speak out against all of this. But what you generally will not hear is their leadership and organizations speaking out against it, except perhaps in the deep south. There is a reason for this. As leaders of our profession, we have to come to terms with the idea that we are not just in it for ourselves. We are in it for our profession as well, and that means we have to put our patients’ interests above our own, and that means we have to do our best to ensure that everyone has access to high quality, affordable health care. Don’t just take my word for it. The American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation and other organizations put together a Charter on Medical Professionalism about ten years ago, specifically making this, fair distribution of health care resources, a part of our professional responsibility. If you go to their website, you will find that virtually every physician organization you can think of has endorsed it. That means the anesthesiologists and orthopedic surgeons as well as the pediatricians and the family practitioners.

For Medicaid expansion specifically, we should note here that the major national physician organizations, including the AMA, and the organizations representing internists, family practice, pediatricians, psychiatry and more, all endorse Medicaid expansion. On the state level, all of these organizations state chapters endorse it as well, with the exception of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, which I am chagrined to say, has endorsed general terms of expansion only.

But this concept is really not controversial among physicians and health care providers. We see everything from the catastrophes to the small indignities. They are tragic, unnecessary, and we are on the road to ending them.

Some in the provider community have expressed concerns about Medicaid in particular as the way we are providing access, so I would like to take a moment to address the concerns we hear most often.

First, that Medicaid is “bad” insurance. What is bad about Medicaid is largely fixed in the ACA. Namely, it is very poorly reimbursed for providers. You’ve already heard from others why hospitals want it, why advocates want it, but for providers in primary care, the frontlines of health care, they get a major boost in reimbursement under the new law. Pennsylvania has historically had awful reimbursement in the Medicaid program, among the worst in the nation. Now, reimbursement will go to par with Medicare reimbursement, a huge incentive for providers to take on Medicaid patients whom they may have been reluctant to see previously. There are other new innovations such as Patient Centered Medical Homes, the new Medicaid Health Homes (which, by the way, we have also not begun implementing in PA – maybe another panel?), and other innovations, coming down the pike, that should really give people who previously had no chance at excellent care, a chance to avoid complications, avoid the ER and avoid the hospital. To live in good health.

I’ve also heard the strange claim that having Medicaid is worse than having no insurance. I suppose that in a vacuum where there is no good data, and where one sees, like I do, patients with no insurance or Medicaid, who don’t know how or aren’t able to access a doctor, you could look at patients who get very sick and mistake that association and attribute that to Medicaid, but we do have data now. In Oregon, due to a fairly bizarre set of circumstances a few years ago, Medicaid eligibility was determined by lottery, creating a natural experiment of haves and have-nots. In the first year, those who were enrolled were 70 percent more likely to have a usual source of care, were 55 percent more likely to see the same doctor over time, received 30 percent more hospital care and received 35 percent more outpatient care, and much more. Incidentally, I heard a cable talking head complain about the Oregon data because it didn’t examine outcomes, such as deaths and such. A fair point if we had more than a year’s worth of data! I, and most other health professionals, would argue that the results they have seen already are impressive and worthwhile in and of themselves.

People often ask me why I am so passionate about this, and I always tell them, “I blame the nuns.” Growing up Catholic, there was nothing so drilled into me as Matthew 25. We used to sing a hymn based on it, “Whatsoever you do to the least of my brothers,” on a regular basis at Mass. And we went to Mass before school every day!

It turns out this is a pretty universal sentiment. I checked. Go to the websites of every mainstream religious denomination – Anglican, Methodist, Mormon, you name it - and it will be in there somewhere: The Social Gospel and Social Justice. Dignity of the individual. Our duties to the less fortunate. It is part of our national Judeo-Christian heritage, and a component of every major religion and philosophy in the world, with one notable exception – Ayn Rand’s. And I mention Ayn Rand and her most famous book, Atlas Shrugged, because it is perennially listed as the second most influential book in America, after the Bible. A damning fact for us.

In spite of that, I am glad that social justice and a commitment to the fair distribution of our health care resources is integral to the sense of duty of my profession, the nursing profession and all health professions.

I often say that I encourage debate about how we get to universal health care, but I refuse to accept that America, alone among all modern nations, and Pennsylvania in particular, will reject the idea that we need to get there.

A final thought from health care economist Uwe Reinhardt, regarding all of the reasons given about why we cannot achieve universal health care; he says, “Go tell God why you cannot do this. He will laugh at you,”

Right now, Medicaid expansion, the Health Insurance Exchanges and many other components of the Affordable Care Act are our best hope. Let’s not squander it.

Thank You.

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

In Conservative Arizona, Government-Run Health Care That Works - Kaiser Health News

 

APACHE JUNCTION, Ariz. – In a low-slung building in the vast desert expanse east of Phoenix, a small school of tropical fish peer out, improbably, from a circular tank into the waiting lounge of the Apache Junction Health Center. The hallways of the nursing home are still. Only half of the rooms are filled, and the men and women who live here seem surely in life’s final season. “These are folks that have chronic cognitive and physical disabilities that are not going to improve,” said George Jacobson, administrator of the nursing home.

That this nursing home is sparsely filled with residents too disabled in mind or body to return home is a stunning achievement for Arizona’s public health insurance agency. A decade ago, 60 percent of Arizonans covered by Medicare and Medicaid, and deemed sick, frail or disabled enough to live in a nursing home, resided in a skilled nursing facility. Today, only 27 percent of them do, and the rest – nearly three out of four– live in assisted living facilities or at home with the help of nurses, attendants and case managers provided by government-paid health plans.

As Congress debates an ambitious and far-reaching effort by the Obama administration to streamline medical care and rein in spending for the nation’s sickest and most expensive patients, Arizona – with its finger-wagging Republican governor and Tea Party enthusiasts – is occupying an unusual place in the national landscape: as a model for how a generously-funded, tightly regulated government program can aid vulnerable, low-income patients.

In Conservative Arizona, Government-Run Health Care That Works - Kaiser Health News

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