Modern Healthcare

Central Illinois faces ‘crisis’ over Medicaid network

- —Virgil Dickson

Hospitals in central Illinois are rejecting managed Medicaid plans at such a troubling rate that lawmakers are calling it a “crisis.”

Decatur (Ill.) Memorial Hospital and Memorial Health System and Hospital Sisters Health System, both based in Springfiel­d, have all said they will cut ties with Molina Healthcare of Illinois over the past few months. The decision leaves tens of thousands of patients in a tough spot since the region’s other managed-care plan, Health Alliance, exited the market last year.

The situation is so dire that Illinois lawmakers gathered on Feb. 8 for a hearing, “Medicaid Managed Care Network Adequacy Crisis in the Central Illinois Region.”

Managed care is still relatively new in Illinois. A state law passed in 2011 required 50% of the state’s Medicaid population, which was around 3 million people, to be enrolled in a managed-care plan by the start of 2015. It’s been harder to get central Illinois hospitals to join and remain in managed care as they are in a less competitiv­e market that is home to many people insured through employers.

“Central Illinois is the last bastion of fee-for-service in the state,” said Barbara Otto, CEO of Health and Disability Advocates, a group that represents people who mostly depend on Medicaid.

After long dealing only with fee-for-service, some hospitals have found it difficult to work with managed-care plans such as Molina.

“The terminatio­n notice was due to ongoing and unresolved issues around medical management, claim payments and credential­ing of physicians,” said Brian Reardon, a spokesman for Hospital Sisters Health System.

A Molina spokeswoma­n says the providers ended their agreements “without cause,” adding “we worked with them in good faith in an attempt to come to an agreement, but unfortunat­ely could not reach a resolution.”

 ??  ?? Reardon
Reardon

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States