Chattanooga Times Free Press

Medicaid holdout states try to improve coverage

Critics insist such efforts end up being more expensive and helping fewer people

- BY ANNA CLAIRE VOLLERS

The Republican-led states that have opted not to expand Medicaid are trying a variety of strategies to save struggling hospitals and cover more people without full expansion, which was one of the key provisions of the Affordable Care Act.

Georgia passed a partial expansion of Medicaid, the federal-state program that provides health coverage to lowincome and disabled Americans, earlier this year. States such as Alabama and Florida have bumped up spending on programs that serve specific population­s, such as pregnant women or residents with mental health needs. And Mississipp­i Republican Gov. Tate Reeves last month floated a plan to use federal money to increase Medicaid reimbursem­ents to hospitals.

But health care advocates say those efforts are weak substitute­s for full expansion — especially as non-expansion states continue to fare poorly on most health metrics.

A decade after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled states’ participat­ion in Medicaid expansion was voluntary, the 10 holdouts (plus North Carolina, which recently approved expansion but hasn’t implemente­d it yet) account for most of the rural hospital closures over the past decade, according to the American Hospital Associatio­n. They tend to have the highest percentage­s of uninsured adults, the highest infant and maternal mortality rates, and their residents are more likely to suffer from chronic conditions such as heart disease and diabetes.

“More Republican lawmakers in the past few years have softened to the idea that there’s something inherently not working in their states’ health care system, that people aren’t getting access to care, doctors aren’t being incentiviz­ed to stay, hospitals aren’t open,” said Jane Adams, government relations director for the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network in Alabama.

“But they haven’t yet come to the conclusion that you must close the coverage gap first before you can address those other problems.”

Supporters of Medicaid expansion have long argued that giving more people health insurance would improve health outcomes and help keep the doors open at financiall­y strapped hospitals, especially in rural areas.

But GOP critics in the nonexpansi­on states — Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Mississipp­i, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming — say it’s too expensive, question its effectiven­ess or remain ideologica­lly opposed to government-funded health care.

MISSISSIPP­I MEDICINE

Every state operates its own Medicaid program within broad federal guidelines, using both state and federal money. The federal government picks up between 50% and 78% of the cost, depending on each state’s per capita income.

Under the 2010 Affordable Care Act, also known as Obama -care, states were empowered to expand Medicaid coverage to adults with incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level — about $20,120 for an individual — with the federal government covering 90% of the cost.

But in many non-expansion states, most adults can’t get full Medicaid coverage no matter how low their incomes are, unless they’re pregnant, a parent or have a disability. And coverage for parents is meager. In Alabama, for example, a single parent with two children can’t qualify for Medicaid if he or she makes more than $4,476 per year.

Three in 4 Americans say they have a favorable view of Medicaid, including a majority of Democrats, independen­ts and even Republican­s, according to a poll earlier this year from KFF, a health care policy research organizati­on. About two-thirds of people living in non-expansion states say they want their state to expand Medicaid.

In Mississipp­i, Reeves’ Democratic opponent in next month’s gubernator­ial election, Brandon Presley, has hammered the incumbent over his opposition to Medicaid expansion. Meanwhile, even some Republican state legislator­s have indicated their willingnes­s to talk about expansion during next year’s session.

Mississipp­i Republican state Rep. Jason White, who is widely expected to be the next House speaker, told Mississipp­i Today in September that he plans to hold discussion­s on Medicaid expansion during the next legislativ­e session. He said Republican­s “have probably earned a little bit of the bad rap we get on health care in Mississipp­i” for refusing in the past to even consider expanding Medicaid.

Last month, Reeves announced a plan to support the state’s struggling hospitals

“These are great programs. But if we just expanded Medicaid, we wouldn’t need to fight for increased funding for programs like that. You don’t need special screening coverage programs if your population has health insurance.”

— JANE ADAMS, GOVERNMENT RELATIONS DIRECTOR FOR THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY’S CANCER ACTION NETWORK IN ALABAMA

through what he called “sweeping Medicaid reimbursem­ent reforms.” His proposal includes having hospitals pay more in certain taxes to draw down more federal dollars, which he said would increase Medicaid reimbursem­ents for their services. Reeves said the proposal would net Mississipp­i hospitals an additional $689 million, though critics remain skeptical. Last year, Reeves’ Medicaid administra­tion told GOP lawmakers discussing a similar scheme that it wouldn’t work, according to Mississipp­i Today.

Reeves said he worked with medical profession­als, including at least eight hospital executives, to create the plan.

Andy Woodard, president and CEO at Forrest General Hospital in Hattiesbur­g, was one of them. He told Stateline in an emailed statement that the new program would help maintain health care access in Mississipp­i.

“These efforts are the result of health care leaders across the state sitting down with the governor’s office over several months exchanging ideas and looking for common areas that would help solve our issues,” he said.

Kim Hoover, interim chief executive officer of the Mississipp­i Hospital Associatio­n, said in a statement to Stateline that the plan is close to one the associatio­n had discussed with lawmakers previously and she hopes the federal government will approve it.

“Most Mississipp­i hospitals are struggling financiall­y — large and small — but the situation is especially dire for our state’s rural hospitals,” she said. Eight of the state’s rural hospitals have closed since 2009, and five more have been in bankruptcy proceeding­s since then.

However, she said, the associatio­n continues to support full Medicaid expansion.

Roy Mitchell, executive director at the Mississipp­i Health Advocacy Program, which also supports expansion, noted that in a survey his organizati­on conducted earlier this year, nearly threefourt­hs of respondent­s said they had difficulty affording care and nearly two-thirds said they delayed care or skipped it because of cost.

“Hundreds of thousands of Mississipp­ians are struggling without health insurance,” he said in an interview. “Until Medicaid is expanded, Mississipp­i will continue to pay the price in lost dollars, lost jobs and lost lives.”

OTHER APPROACHES

In July, Georgia launched a partial Medicaid expansion program, called Georgia Pathways to Coverage, that the state had to sue the federal government to enact. Georgia Pathways slightly relaxes the state’s strict coverage rules so adults with incomes up to 100% of the federal poverty level — or who earn up to $14,600 a year — are eligible for Medicaid.

The plan makes Georgia the only state to currently require Medicaid recipients to work, a provision initially rejected by the Biden administra­tion, though a few other states have tried work requiremen­ts in the past. Each month, Georgia recipients will have to complete 80 hours of work or job training to keep their coverage.

Georgia Republican state Rep. Mark Newton, who’s also an emergency physician, called the Pathways program “good news for all those people who are hardworkin­g across rural Georgia” during a public meeting in August. He praised the program for increasing coverage for the “working poor” while allowing those who miss Georgia’s income cutoff to keep their commercial insurance plans if they have them. He pointed out that commercial plans pay hospitals at a higher rate than Medicaid does.

But some health care advocates have panned the program. Leah Chan, a health policy analyst at the Georgia Budget & Policy Institute, an Atlanta-based economic research and policy nonprofit, said that compared with full Medicaid expansion, Georgia Pathways will cost five times more per person while covering far fewer people.

The state plans for about 100,000 people to gain coverage in the program’s first year. If it reaches that number, coverage would cost the state about $2,490 per new enrollee, according to the institute analysis. But full Medicaid expansion would make about 482,000 Georgians eligible for coverage and would cost about $496 per new enrollee.

Since the Pathways program launched in July, a little more than 1,000 people have enrolled. And while it’s too soon to say why enrollment has been so low, Chan said, the work requiremen­t will likely have an effect on how many people are able to apply for and maintain their health insurance through the program.

“With this program, there’s the added layer of not just enrollment, but monthly reporting where you have to provide some verificati­on of your 80 hours of employment, higher education, volunteeri­ng, etc.,” Chan said. “Even for people who are eligible, that act of doing that monthly reporting could keep them from being covered.”

The program is likely to be closely watched by Republican­s in other states, as some in Congress have recently pushed for allowing work requiremen­ts for Medicaid enrollees.

In Alabama, Republican Gov. Kay Ivey has cited cost as her main reason for not expanding Medicaid. Instead, the state legislatur­e has pursued a variety of smaller bills and policies to shore up health care in the state. Last year, for example, Alabama legislator­s approved a budget that extended Medicaid postpartum coverage to 12 months after the end of a pregnancy. The state has also increased funding for crisis mental health services and started offering breast and cervical cancer screenings for low-income women.

“These are great programs,” said Adams, of the Cancer Action Network, whose organizati­on works with other Alabama-based groups in support of increased health care funding. “But if we just expanded Medicaid, we wouldn’t need to fight for increased funding for programs like that. You don’t need special screening coverage programs if your population has health insurance.”

Stateline is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Stateline maintains editorial independen­ce. Contact Editor Scott S. Greenberge­r for questions: info@stateline.org. Follow Stateline on Facebook and Twitter.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GEORGE WALKER IV ?? Dentist Ryan O’Neill, left, repairs the teeth of Danielle Wilkes during a Sept. 7 clinic visit in Nashville.
AP PHOTO/GEORGE WALKER IV Dentist Ryan O’Neill, left, repairs the teeth of Danielle Wilkes during a Sept. 7 clinic visit in Nashville.

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