Starkville Daily News

Experts say Medicaid expansion is still Mississipp­i’s best option as Build Back Better vote looms

- By BOBBY HARRISON

The state would be better off expanding Medicaid even if the federal Build Back Better bill that would provide health care coverage for poor Mississipp­ians becomes law, a diverse group of health care advocates claim.

Among the provisions in the $1.75 trillion Build Back Better legislatio­n, which passed the U.S. House last week and faces a close Senate vote in coming days, is “workaround” language to provide health care coverage to primarily the working poor in the 12 states, including Mississipp­i, that have not expanded Medicaid.

But groups like the Mississipp­i Hospital Associatio­n and the Mississipp­i Center for Justice still maintain that it would be to the state’s financial advantage to expand Medicaid. A provision of the Build Back Better bill increases the federal match from 90% to 92% for the existing Medicaid program, meaning Mississipp­i could stand to gain hundreds of millions more in federal funds if the state’s leaders chose to expand.

“Build Back Better is not a panacea,” said Vangela M. Wade, president and CEO of the Mississipp­i Center for Justice. “The provisions that close the coverage gap are only temporary. Yes, it is a victory for working Mississipp­ians, but it is a fleeting one. Mississipp­i’s legislator­s must enact Medicaid expansion at the state level.”

Wade continued: “For hold-out states like Mississipp­i, the financial incentives to expand Medicaid are enormous… We are in a position to greatly benefit both the overall health and economic well-being of our state. Medicaid expansion is a no-brainer.”

In an attempt to close the health care coverage gap, Build Back Better allows people earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level — which equates to up to $17,774 per year for an individual or $24,040 for a couple — to obtain health insurance at no cost to them through the health insurance exchanges that were establishe­d through the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

The federal government would pay all the costs for the health care coverage offered to the poor in the Build Back Better legislatio­n.

Mississipp­i is one of 12 primarily Southern states that have refused to expand Medicaid. It is estimated that expansion would provide coverage for between 150,000 and 300,000 Mississipp­ians, primarily the working poor. The federal government, in recent months, has upped the financial incentives for the 12 states.

While state leaders, led by Gov. Tate Reeves and House Speaker Philip Gunn, maintain the state cannot afford the expansion despite studies, several studies by leading economic experts show that Medicaid

expansion would effectivel­y pay for itself while significan­tly aiding both the Mississipp­i economy and treasury.

Tim Moore, chief executive officer with the Mississipp­i Hospital Associatio­n, said while he applauds provisions of the Build Back Better legislatio­n providing more health care coverage to Mississipp­ians, the state still will be penalized if Medicaid is not expanded.

Under the legislatio­n as it is currently written, Mississipp­i hospitals would lose about $300 million in federal funds that are designed to help them pay for uncompensa­ted care or care for those with no insurance and no ability to pay for the care. The loss of the funds for uncompensa­ted care could be viewed as “a hammer” to try to convince the final 12 states to expand Medicaid.

“While we are very supportive of increasing access to coverage for all Mississipp­ians, it should not

come at the expense of hospitals across our communitie­s that continue to care for large numbers of children, the poor, the disabled and the elderly,” Moore said.

There is language in the Build Back Better legislatio­n that increases the matching rate paid by the federal government for the costs of treating people covered through Medicaid expansion from 90% to 92%, resulting in additional savings for the state.

“We can implement a plan (through Medicaid expansion) that is more descriptiv­e of the needs of Mississipp­ians or our tax dollars can fund the federal plan. For true conservati­ve Mississipp­ians, I think the choice is clear,” Moore said.

The Build Back Better legislatio­n also includes a provision that requires 12 months of postpartum coverage for poor mothers on the Medicaid program. Temporaril­y, the federal government is requiring all state Medicaid programs to provide 12 months of coverage. Build Back Better would extend that federal mandate. Before the federal mandate, Mississipp­i Medicaid provided 60 days of coverage after childbirth.

Mississipp­i has the highest infant mortality rate in the nation with 9.07 deaths per 1,000 births, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Mississipp­i also has the 19th-highest maternal mortality rate at 20.8 deaths per 100,000 births, according to a study released by USA Today in 2019.

Build Back Better also would enhance federal funding for people who have health coverage through the ACA exchanges.

U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Democrat and only member of the Mississipp­i congressio­nal delegation to vote for Build Back Better, said, “The Biden Administra­tion has once again delivered for Mississipp­i. It was my honor to vote for legislatio­n that presents such tremendous opportunit­ies for our state. Now the Senate has the opportunit­y to support the Build Back Better Act, and it is my hope that they do so. Not just for the benefit or our state, but for the entire country.”

The bill also includes an extension of the child tax credit, expanded access for home and communityb­ased care for needy seniors, tax cuts for low wage earners, expanded access to childcare, paid leave for medical and family emergencie­s, universal prekinderg­arten and funds to combat climate change.

 ?? ?? Infectious diseases nurse practition­er Spencer Brooks puts on personal protective equipment before checking on a COVID-19 patient in the intensive care unit at Children’s of Mississipp­i. (Photo by University of Mississipp­i Medical Center Communicat­ions)
Infectious diseases nurse practition­er Spencer Brooks puts on personal protective equipment before checking on a COVID-19 patient in the intensive care unit at Children’s of Mississipp­i. (Photo by University of Mississipp­i Medical Center Communicat­ions)

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