States Driven to Reduce Health
Coverage for Poor
WASHINGTON (By Amy Goldstein,
Washington Post) December 27, 2008
—
States from Rhode Island to
California are being forced to
curtail Medicaid, the government
health insurance program for the
poor, as they struggle to cope with
the deteriorating economy.
With revenue falling at the same
time that more people are losing
their jobs and private health
coverage, states already have pared
their programs and many are looking
at deeper cuts for the coming year.
Already, 19 states — including
Maryland and Virginia — and the
District of Columbia have lowered
payments to hospitals and nursing
homes, eliminated coverage for some
treatments, and forced some
recipients out of the insurance
program completely.
Many are halting payments for
health-care services not required by
the federal government, such as
physical therapy, eyeglasses,
hearing aids and hospice care. A few
states are requiring poor patients
to chip in more toward their care.
"It's not a pretty list at all,"
said Michael Hales, Medicaid
director in Utah.
Medicaid, a central piece of the
Great Society safety net created in
the 1960s, is the nation's largest
source of government health
insurance. It covered 50 million
Americans last year. The program is
a shared responsibility of the
federal government and the states,
with federal money paying an average
of 57 percent of the bills and
states providing the rest.
Federal health officials set minimum
rules about who can enroll and what
care must be covered, but states are
free to add to the basics. Those
optional patients and services are
what many states are rethinking now.
Dems sympathetic?
With the program the largest or
second-largest expense in every state's
budget, governors and state legislators
have been pleading with Congress and the
incoming Obama administration for help.
The Democrats, who hold majorities in
the House and the Senate, are sounding
sympathetic for now. They are
considering close to $100 billion to
increase the share of Medicaid's costs
that the federal government would pay
during the next two years.
President-elect Barack Obama also is
open to extra help for Medicaid as part
of a broad strategy to spur the economy.
"We are considering a number of
proposals . . . including helping states
meet Medicaid needs; reducing
health-care costs; rebuilding our
crumbling roads, bridges and schools;
and ensuring that more families can stay
in their homes," said Nick Shapiro, an
Obama transition spokesman.
According to a Washington source who is
in close contact with lawmakers, some in
Congress also are beginning to entertain
the idea of allowing unemployed people
who have lost health benefits to sign up
for Medicaid, with federal money paying
the entire bill.
In the meantime, uncertainty over how
much help may come, and when it might
arrive, is prompting many states to make
the biggest reductions to their Medicaid
programs in years — and in some cases,
ever.
'Cuts into the core'
Diane Rowland, executive director of the
Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the
Uninsured, said the pressure on Medicaid
programs is particularly acute because
the economy has deteriorated so soon
after a milder recession early in the
decade. States already "have taken the
cuts that were making the program more
efficient. . . . Now they are making . .
. cuts into the core," she said.
Nineteen states and the District have
cut Medicaid for the current fiscal
year, according to a survey this month
by Families USA, a liberal consumer
health lobby. All but one, plus six
other states, are drafting deeper
reductions for the coming fiscal year
that they hope to avoid. Florida's
Medicaid officials have just handed the
governor and legislature a blueprint for
a 10 percent reduction; it would
eliminate coverage for 7,800 18- and
19-year-olds and 6,800 pregnant women.
Among the states with the gravest
financial problems — and pressures on
Medicaid — is California. In July, Medi-Cal,
as the program there is known, slashed
by 10 percent the rates it pays
hospitals, nursing homes, speech
pathologists and other providers of
health care. It tried to lower payments
to doctors and dentists, too, but they
have sued to block the decreases.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) has asked
the state legislature to approve other
cuts, including an end to dental care
for adults, about 1 million of whom use
it now, and a sharp reduction in care
for recent immigrants.
At two hospitals run by NorthBay
Healthcare, midway between San Francisco
and Sacramento, about one patient in
five is on Medi-Cal. The rate cuts
translate into a $4 million loss this
year. In September, the health system
closed a rehabilitation program for
children that provided physical therapy,
speech therapy and other help to about
300 young patients at a time — with 100
more usually on the waiting list.
"It was heart-wrenching to have to go
out and announce," said Steve
Huddleston, NorthBay's vice president of
public affairs.
The strain has spread through the
Washington area. The District's Medicaid
rolls have risen by 5,000 in the past
year to nearly 150,000. To cope, the
District made $20 million worth of
changes to the program and a separate
fund for people who are uninsured,
including postponing an increase in
payments to primary-care doctors.
In Maryland, Medicaid enrollment has
jumped by 8 percent in the past year,
and the state has pared $82 million from
the program for this year, reducing
planned increases in payments to nursing
homes, managed-care organizations,
private nurses and home health aides.
With a larger state deficit forecast for
next year, Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) is
expected to propose deeper cuts in his
budget next month, probably including a
lengthy delay of the state's biggest
Medicaid expansion in years: a planned
extension of coverage to 100,000 parents
and other adults.
In October, Virginia eliminated a small
fund for indigent patients. For the
coming year, Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D)
has just proposed $245 million in cuts
from the nearly $3.3 billion that the
commonwealth devotes to Medicaid,
including reduced payments to hospitals
and new limits on home health care.
Rhode Island's approach has been the
most far-reaching to date. This week, it
announced an agreement with U.S. health
officials that would, if the state
legislature consents, change the entire
financial basis of the program. The
state would forfeit its Medicaid
entitlement and accept a total of $12
billion in federal money over the next
five years. In exchange, Rhode Island
would win uncommon freedom from federal
rules, allowing it to enroll all its
Medicaid patients in managed care, cover
less treatment and expand care for
elderly patients at home, instead of in
more-expensive nursing homes.
'Real unpleasant stuff'
In South Carolina, Medicaid officials
last week announced the third round of
cuts since August. They are "real
unpleasant stuff," said Jeff Stensland,
spokesman for the state's Department of
Health and Human Services. The program
will stop paying for most dental care
for adults, eliminate nutritional
supplements, cut home-delivered meals
from 14 a week to seven, curtail mental
health counseling, stop building
wheelchair ramps and pay for fewer
breast and cervical cancer screenings.
Edna McClain, founder of Hospice Care of
Tri-County in Columbia, S.C., helped
coax state health officials to expand
Medicaid to cover nursing care and other
support for dying patients in the
mid-1990s.
She was stunned this month when an
e-mail arrived from South Carolina's
Department of Health and Human Services
informing her that as of Jan. 1,
Medicaid no longer would pay for new
hospice patients. And after March 31, it
would stop covering most people on
Medicaid already in hospice care.
With a $500,000 hole in her budget, she
worries about how to care for low-income
hospice patients, including a
47-year-old man whose weakened body is
dangerously retaining fluid as he awaits
a liver transplant.
The day after she received notice from
the state, McClain composed a letter and
fired it off to 107 state legislators.
"They can at least hear from me," she
said. But she knows, she said, her
protest is too late to make a
difference.