Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Medicaid expansion push on in Mississipp­i

- LEAH WILLINGHAM

JACKSON, Miss. — After voters expanded Medicaid in conservati­ve states like Missouri and Oklahoma, health care advocates are renewing a push for expansion in Mississipp­i and other Southern states where Republican leaders have long been opposed.

They say the changing tide has followed rising income inequality, joblessnes­s and pressure from hospitals in economic turmoil — issues exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“There have been, in the last two years, votes on Medicaid expansion in some of the most conservati­ve, Republican-leaning states in the country, and Medicaid expansion has never lost,” said Eliot Fishman, senior director of Health Policy at Families USA, a health care advocacy organizati­on.

Fishman spoke Thursday during an online forum about Medicaid expansion hosted by the Mississipp­i Health Advocacy Program and the Mississipp­i Center for Justice.

Medicaid expansion is an option under the health care overhaul that President Barack Obama signed into law in 2010. Many Democratic-controlled states agreed to expansion, mainly for people whose jobs don’t provide health insurance.

However, since Republican Donald Trump became president in January 2017, voters in Idaho, Nebraska, Utah, Oklahoma, Maine and most recently Missouri have approved Medicaid expansion by ballot measures. In Virginia, legislator­s passed Medicaid expansion after Democrats gained power.

“This is clearly an issue which you can no longer shut down voter interest [in] by just saying the word ‘Obamacare,’” Fishman said. “That power has waned.”

There are now 12 states — including Mississipp­i, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee and Florida — that have not expanded Medicaid. A newly formed collaborat­ive, Southerner­s for Medicaid Expansion, is aiming to put pressure on the holdouts.

Medicaid is a government health insurance program for the needy, aged, blind and disabled, and it is financed by state and federal money. Because Mississipp­i is poor, the federal government pays nearly 78% of the cost.

Under expansion, the federal government pays 90% of the cost in any state.

About 25% of Mississipp­i’s nearly 3 million residents are already enrolled in Medicaid, and opponents have said they don’t want more people taking part in a government program.

Roy Mitchell, executive director of the Mississipp­i Health Advocacy Program, said hospitals are in desperate need of the money. Uncompensa­ted care costs in Mississipp­i exceed $600 million annually, according to a 2019 statement from the Mississipp­i Hospital Associatio­n.

“Let’s face it, providers are businessme­n. Despite their marketing, they are inherently out to make a profit, and they are going to have to wake up in Mississipp­i,” Mitchell said. “I’m sure covid did a good job of doing that.”

Addressing ailing hospitals has been controvers­ial. Republican Gov. Tate Reeves and leaders in the Republican-controlled Mississipp­i Legislatur­e have opposed Medicaid expansion. Reeves has said money should go instead to federally funded community health centers that help people in need.

Reeves has said repeatedly that the pandemic has not changed his mind about expansion. And Republican House Speaker Philip Gunn told reporters this month that he also remains opposed.

The Mississipp­i Hospital Associatio­n in 2019 proposed “Mississipp­i Cares,” which it called Medicaid reform but not expansion. It was modeled after an Indiana program enacted under then-Gov. Mike Pence. It would expand Medicaid eligibilit­y while setting $20 monthly premium payments and co-pays. The proposal gained no traction during this year’s Mississipp­i legislativ­e session.

“For all the stars to align in a ballot initiative … there’s got to be a commitment on the part of providers in Mississipp­i, I think, and we have to also look realistica­lly at the amount of resources that it takes to do a ballot initiative,” Mitchell said. “But it is certainly not out of reach.”

Leah Willingham is a corps member for the AP/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues.

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