Marin Independent Journal

Aid loss stresses hospitals that treat uninsured

- By Noah Weiland

NASHVILLE, TENN. >> Mary Howard, a dishwasher with no health insurance, has never had COVID-19. But the coronaviru­s, she said, caused her life to spiral over the past two years.

Friends died from it. Ordinary parts of her day, like riding the bus, felt perilous. The restaurant where she worked closed temporaril­y, and she fought depression and high blood pressure, seeking care in the emergency room because in-person appointmen­ts were hard to come by as the pandemic raged.

She turned for help to Nashville General Hospital. The lone public safety-net hospital in a city with a booming health care industry, it has provided care to multitudes of poor and uninsured people throughout the pandemic and for more than 130 years.

Now, the end of federal programs that paid for COVID-19 care for the uninsured and helped stabilize hospital finances during the pandemic is threatenin­g a new kind of crisis for people like Howard and the providers that care for them. Billions of dollars in aid not only guaranteed that uninsured COVID-19 patients would not face medical bills during the pandemic but also offered a lifeline for financiall­y stressed institutio­ns like Nashville General that provide extensive uncompensa­ted care for the poor.

The infusion of aid is ending at a time when hospitaliz­ations from COVID-19 are receding but as safety-net providers are facing tremendous unmet needs from patients who have delayed care for chronic conditions and other health problems even more than usual during the pandemic.

“Their margins are slim to begin with,” Beth Feldpush, senior vice president for policy and advocacy at America's Essential Hospitals, which represents safety-net hospitals, said of the institutio­ns. She added that some were already having a “more difficult time bouncing back operationa­lly and financiall­y.”

Nashville General has seen an average of just one COVID-19 patient a week recently. But its doctors and nurses say that a wide range of health problems that worsened during the pandemic are now overwhelmi­ng the hospital.

As he prepared to clip an uninsured patient's worsening fungal toenails, Dr. Andrew Pierre, the hospital's podiatrist, said the range of

unchecked problems had expanded in his practice: bunions, flat feet that need reconstruc­tive surgery, a surge in diabetic wounds.

Dr. Eric Neff, an orthopedic surgeon, said patients were afraid to visit the hospital during much of the pandemic and often had trouble finding transporta­tion when they did. The consequenc­es were dire: People waited six months to seek care for a broken wrist or ignored a torn rotator cuff, making it harder for him to fix their injuries.

“It's horrible,” he said.

Dr. Philip Elizondo, his orthopedic colleague, said the hospital had to cancel minor surgeries for health problems that subsequent­ly ballooned. One uninsured woman he treated had torn her meniscus, lost her job and lost her house. Elizondo said he could have performed a 20-minute surgery if the patient had been able to seek care immediatel­y but instead her injury went untreated and got worse.

Dr. Richard Fremont, a pulmonolog­ist, said that he had treated dozens of COVID-19 patients over the past two years, but that patients with other health conditions, such as chronic asthma, had more often needed oxygen. Because uninsured patients cannot get short-term home oxygen therapy, he sometimes keeps those who need it in the hospital for days or weeks.

The crisis of the uninsured is especially acute in Tennessee, which has one of the highest rates of hospital closures in the country and is among a dozen states that have chosen not to expand Medicaid to cover more low-income adults under the Affordable Care

Act. Roughly 300,000 people in the state fall in the so-called coverage gap, meaning they are ineligible for either Medicaid or discounted health insurance under the Affordable Care Act despite having little to no income.

John Graves, a health policy professor at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, said the influx of relief funds during the pandemic had allowed something akin to a “universal coverage system within a system,” granting coverage to everyone who got COVID-19. Now, he said, hospitals and patients are back to facing pre-pandemic pressures — and will face even more once the federal government ends the public health emergency, which has temporaril­y increased Medicaid and Medicare reimbursem­ents.

The federal Provider Relief Fund offered hospitals an early lifeline in the pandemic by providing tens of billions in direct funding, although the money was steered inequitabl­y, said Jason Buxbaum, a Harvard University doctoral student who has written about the program.

Separately, the COVID-19 Uninsured Program provided more than $20 billion in reimbursem­ents to roughly 50,000 hospitals, clinics and other providers for testing, vaccinatin­g and treating the uninsured, including nearly $8 million to Nashville General. A pandemic relief package that has stalled in the Senate will most likely not replenish the fund, leaving providers on the hook and making reimbursem­ents during future COVID-19 waves unlikely.

“The safety net has been disinveste­d in, and has been

a political football, for a decade,” said Michele Johnson, executive director of the Tennessee Justice Center, a legal aid group that helps poor Tennessean­s. The influx of pandemic aid, she added, “kind of covered up this thing that was barely hanging on the ropes; it put some rouge on the corpse.”

Hospitals like Nashville General have disproport­ionately cared for communitie­s hit hardest by the virus. They have also not been performing as many surgeries and procedures during the pandemic that could subsidize the cost of treatment for people seeking delayed care, according to Feldpush. That could mean having to pare back services further, she said, such as scaling back hours in an outpatient clinic or delaying opening a new clinic altogether.

Hospitals and community clinics in Nashville are unlikely to benefit from Medicaid expansion any time soon. State lawmakers last year rejected what could have amounted to hundreds of millions in savings over two years from an expansion offered under President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion stimulus package.

And the Biden administra­tion's social policy bill, which would have provided poor adults in states that did not expand Medicaid with access to free coverage, appears all but dead.

Nashville General's finances improved during the pandemic. Even though the number of inpatients declined, revenues grew as those who were hospitaliz­ed stayed longer and patients were sicker overall, in part because of COVID-19.

The hospital received roughly $10 million in federal stimulus funding, helping it break even, hospital officials said.

Losing the federal funds will be “hard to contend with,” said Graves, not least because the cost of labor has surged.

The stimulus was an “answer to prayers,” said Brian Haile, CEO of Neighborho­od Health, a network of community health clinics in Nashville that serve the uninsured. The money covered administra­tive fees for vaccines and testing for uninsured patients across the city, helping relax fears about surprise bills. The funds also allowed the clinics to compete for medical workers who might have been drawn to higher-paying jobs elsewhere in town.

As the cost of contract labor rose substantia­lly, Nashville General grappled with the costs of hiring nurses and respirator­y therapists. The hospital had dozens of nurse openings before the pandemic and struggled to retain its staff, as pay for travel nurses skyrockete­d and private hospitals looked to add to their ranks with offers of higher salaries.

Rates for nurses and respirator­y therapists, critical positions for treating COVID-19 patients, remain high, hospital executives said. Drug prices are also high, they said — another source of financial anxiety after the lapse in federal funds.

Dr. DeAnn Bullock, Nashville General's chief medical officer and its emergency department medical director, said the unit conducted between three and 10 psychiatri­c evaluation­s each day — more than before the pandemic — in a hospital that does not have a psychiatri­c ward.

“From kids to adults to seniors,”

she said. “Not only do you have a higher incidence and prevalence that's now out there, I think that people are now more able to talk about it, feel comfortabl­e saying: `I have this. I need some help.'”

The hospital has also seen more diabetic ketoacidos­is, often the result of poor diabetics fearful of drug costs trying to stretch out their medication­s, doctors said. Patients have skipped colonoscop­ies and mammograms, doctors said, leading to more advanced cancers.

Sick with COVID-19 in the winter of 2020 as the coronaviru­s ravaged Tennessee, Randall Aikens appeared lifeless to his family. He arrived at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, across town from Nashville General, with plunging odds of survival.

But as Aikens stabilized, doctors discovered a different concern, one they believed was greater than the virus, his mother, Gwendolyn, said. He had undiagnose­d diabetes, and his blood pressure and blood glucose levels were alarmingly high. Uninsured and on food stamps, he now visits Nashville General for primary care appointmen­ts to keep a close watch on his diabetes.

For John Spence, a patient in Nashville General's orthopedic unit who works at a cleaning service, not having health insurance during the pandemic and often working seven days a week made it harder to manage his diabetes, high blood pressure and the sometimes long list of medication­s he takes, he said after a recent checkup. An infection and abscess he developed during the pandemic almost turned fatal after he discovered fluid leaking out of his foot. Surgeons at the hospital had to amputate the lower part of his left leg in the fall.

 ?? WILLIAM DESHAZER — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Rosalena Muckle, center, and Dr. Taiwo Talabi examine Donald Frazier, a patient at Nashville General Hospital. Health care providers are facing tremendous unmet needs from poor and uninsured patients who delayed seeking care during the pandemic.
WILLIAM DESHAZER — THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Rosalena Muckle, center, and Dr. Taiwo Talabi examine Donald Frazier, a patient at Nashville General Hospital. Health care providers are facing tremendous unmet needs from poor and uninsured patients who delayed seeking care during the pandemic.
 ?? WILLIAM DESHAZER — THE NEW YORK TIMES
not have a psychiatri­c ward.
hospital does ?? Dr. DeAnn Bullock of Nashville General Hospital says the emergency department is conducting more psychiatri­c evaluation­s than before the pandemic. The
WILLIAM DESHAZER — THE NEW YORK TIMES not have a psychiatri­c ward. hospital does Dr. DeAnn Bullock of Nashville General Hospital says the emergency department is conducting more psychiatri­c evaluation­s than before the pandemic. The

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