Chattanooga Times Free Press

Life-changing services at risk for millions if Medicaid is cut

- NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Frances Isbell has spinal muscular atrophy, a genetic disorder that has left her unable to walk or even roll over in bed. But Isbell has a personal care assistant through Medicaid, and the help allowed her to go to law school at the University of Alabama. She will graduate next month.

She hopes to become a disability rights lawyer — “I’d love to see her on the Supreme Court someday,” her aide, Christy Robertson, said, — but staying independen­t will be crucial to her profession­al future.

The care she gets is an optional benefit under federal Medicaid law, which means each state can decide whether to offer it and how much to spend. Optional services she and millions of other Medicaid beneficiar­ies receive would be particular­ly at risk under Republican proposals to scale back Medicaid as part of legislatio­n to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

Those services include dental care for adults, longterm care for disabled and elderly people living at home, certain therapies that children with disabiliti­es receive in school, prosthetic limbs and even prescripti­on drugs.

The battle over replacing the Affordable Care Act has focused intensely on the future of Medicaid, the state-federal health insurance program for the poor and vulnerable.

But the House and Senate bills also would make profound changes to the nature of Medicaid, shifting it from an open-ended entitlemen­t to a program with strict federal funding limits.

Those changes would have far bigger consequenc­es over time, affecting many more of the roughly 74 million Americans on Medicaid. The threat to optional services may be especially acute in states, such as Alabama, that already spend far less than the national average on Medicaid and are averse to raising more revenue through taxes.

The drain on Medicaid funding would worsen over time under the bill Senate Republican­s are working to pass, with the new funding limits starting in 2021 and having the biggest impact more than a decade from now. The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office estimated Medicaid spending would be 26 percent lower under the Senate plan than it would be under current law in 2026 — and 35 percent lower in 2036.

Under the Senate plan, states would receive a fixed annual amount for each Medicaid beneficiar­y, with each category of beneficiar­ies, like children and the disabled, getting a different base amount based on recent costs. The amount would increase every year by a formula is expected to grow more slowly than average medical costs after 2025. Disabled children would not be subject to the spending caps.

Conservati­ves say Medicaid spending, which consumes a major and growing portion of the federal and states’ budgets, needs to be reined in. The current system of unlimited federal matching funds, they say, has encouraged states to milk as much as they can, sometimes wastefully.

 ?? MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kimberlee Harkins sits with her brother, Eric Harkins, at an ice cream parlor in Birmingham, Ala., last month. Eric has cerebral palsy and a developmen­tal disability and qualifies for 125 hours per week of help from a personal care assistant provided...
MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Kimberlee Harkins sits with her brother, Eric Harkins, at an ice cream parlor in Birmingham, Ala., last month. Eric has cerebral palsy and a developmen­tal disability and qualifies for 125 hours per week of help from a personal care assistant provided...

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