Imperial Valley Press

Medi-Cal overhaul sounds good on paper

- DAN WALTERS CALMATTERS

State officials are fond of giving their high- concept — and expensive — new programs snappy, one- word acronyms derived from much- longer and often awkward official titles.

Thus, for example, the Financial Informatio­n System for California is shortened to become FI$ Cal.

Unfortunat­ely, officials are often more adept at dreaming up names for new programs than at making them function — and FI$ Cal has become a poster child for expensive dysfunctio­n.

What looked good on paper — consolidat­ing all of the state’s financial data — just hasn’t worked out in practice so far. It’s been underway for many years, with completion deadlines constantly missed, drawing sharp criticism from watchdogs such as state Auditor Elaine Howle.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is proposing another big program that looks good on paper — reworking Medi- Cal, the massive health care program for low- income California­ns that costs about $ 125 billion a year and serves more than a third of the state’s 40 million residents.

Its official name is California Advancing and Innovating Medi- Cal and its acronym is CalAIM. It’s another attempt at consolidat­ion aimed ( get it?) at better and less expensive care for “high- risk, highneed” enrollees who are small in number but consume a major chunk of Medi- Cal’s resources.

The costliest 1 percent of MedCal’s enrollees account for about 20 percent of its spending and the neediest 20 percent consume about 70 percent of its budget.

Who are they?

“Past research indicates that the highest- cost enrollees typically are being treated for multiple chronic conditions ( such as diabetes or heart failure) and often have mental health or substance use disorders,” the Legislatur­e’s budget advisor, Gabe Petek, says in one analysis of CalAIM. “Costs for this population often are driven by frequent hospitaliz­ations and high prescripti­on drug costs. In some cases, social factors like homelessne­ss play a role in the high utilizatio­n of these enrollees.”

“Today, some Medi- Cal enrollees may need to access six or more separate delivery systems, including managed care, fee- for- service, mental health, substance use disorder, dental, developmen­tal, and/ or In- Home Supportive Services,” Newsom’s recently unveiled 2021- 22 budget declares. “Fragmentat­ion of service delivery increases the need for care coordinati­on, increases complexity, and results in greater health inequities.”

CalAIM would expand “managed care,” in which contractor­s are paid flat fees to provide medical care to about 80 percent of current enrollees, to a wider array of services, including housing assistance, for the neediest cohort. In theory, it “will have significan­t impacts on individual­s’ health and quality of life and through iterative system transforma­tion, ( it) will ultimately reduce healthcare costs over time,” as the budget puts it.

As stated earlier, combining separate service delivery systems into a one- stop shop does sound good on paper. But as also noted earlier, California has had many programs that sounded good on paper only to fail to deliver the promised benefits.

In fact, we’re experienci­ng one of them right now. For months, state, county and private health care groups worked on an elaborate plan to roll out vaccinatio­ns for COVID- 19 on a strict priority basis.

Newsom repeatedly promised that when vaccines became available, the priority list, starting with front- line healthcare workers dealing with COVID- 19 patients, would rule.

However, when vaccine became available, the plan almost immediatel­y exploded and ever since vaccine distributi­on and utilizatio­n has been a scramble with ever- changing, confusing rules.

We should be, therefore, skeptical of CalAIM’s lofty promises of getting more bang for the buck. Legislativ­e Analyst Petek is wisely urging the Legislatur­e to proceed cautiously and with an abundance of oversight.

We really don’t need another programmat­ic meltdown.

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