Starkville Daily News

Is subscripti­on model healthcare a real alternativ­e to Medicaid expansion in Mississipp­i?

- SID SALTER

Mississipp­ians have, like citizens in many Southern states, argued for a long time over the question of Medicaid expansion. The arguments run the gamut from financial to moral to philosophi­cal to purely political and usually intensely partisan.

The debate continues in 2023, a courthouse-tostatehou­se election year in the state. In the wake of the Dobbs abortion case decision by the Supreme Court, the current debate has focused on increasing postpartum Medicaid care for mothers from the present 60 days to one year. In the state with the highest rate of infant mortality in the country and as the originatin­g state for the Dobbs anti-abortion decision, an expansion of Medicaid for this purpose more than makes sense.

But the politics of Medicaid expansion in Mississipp­i is intensely partisan. One conservati­ve advocacy group that has been monolithic in its opposition to Medicaid expansion for more than a decade is the Mississipp­i Center for Public Policy. The group is still opposing Medicaid expansion in Mississipp­i – currently on the basis that the Florida model of subscripti­on primary care “ultimately costs less than regular insurance prices with better quality care.”

The bright line explanatio­n for cheaper medical care in the subscripti­on model is that they claim to remove the insurance companies from between the doctor and the patient.

For those with the means to afford private insurance of some kind, the subscripti­on model may well be worth exploring. But as a substitute for Medicaid, serving some of the poorest people in America, the subscripti­on model has many failures and shortcomin­gs.

The subscripti­on model requires a monthly, quarterly or annual payment, usually between $80 to $100 monthly, to pay for routine monitoring, checkups, comprehens­ive care and tests. But urgent care and specialize­d care are not covered. There is no health insurance to pick up the massive costs of catastroph­ic medical events like car accidents or long interventi­on battles with dread diseases.

Because of the lack of traditiona­l health insurance, experts say subscripti­on primary care customers need a health savings account (HSA) or a high deductible health insurance plan (HDHP) in case a car accident or cancer battle occurs.

To make those monthly primary care subscripti­on payments, HSA contributi­ons and HDHP premiums, there must be a steady stream of income. Perhaps subscripti­on primary care works as a substitute for traditiona­l fee-forservice health insurance. But as a substitute for Medicaid, the more likely outcome is that the Mississipp­ian in poverty will remain uninsured.

As I've written before, regardless of one's politics, taxpayers have and will continue to bear the brunt of healthcare costs for the poor. Two federal laws virtually dictate unreimburs­ed spending.

Many of the government-owned community hospitals in Mississipp­i were funded through the federal Hill-burton Act, which originally gave hospitals built with federal dollars a 20-year post-constructi­on mandate to provide free or subsidized care to a portion of their indigent patients. In 1975, Congress enacted an amendment to the Hillburton Program, Title XVI of the Public Health Service Act. Facilities assisted under Title XVI were required to provide uncompensa­ted services in perpetuity.

The uninsured primarily receive uncompensa­ted care. Nationally, uncompensa­ted care in the U.S. is estimated to comprise over 55 percent of all emergency care delivered. That percentage is believed to be significan­tly higher in Mississipp­i's state-owned rural hospitals. Mississipp­i hospitals estimate they delivered $600 million in uncompensa­ted care.

Second, there is the 1986 Emergency Medical Treatment Act (EMTALA) which was enacted by Congress. This act requires any hospital that accepts Medicare payments to provide care to any patient who arrives in its emergency department for treatment, regardless of the patient's citizenshi­p, legal status in the United States or ability to pay for the services – including medical transport and hospital care.

Also applicable under EMTALA is the requiremen­t that every U.S. hospital with an emergency room has a legal duty to treat patients who arrive in labor. The law allows hospitals to bill patients and sue them for unpaid bills, but the odds of making recoveries from indigent patients are extremely low.

Subscripti­on primary care serves people with resources. Subscripti­on primary care may have a place in Mississipp­i's healthcare arsenal, but it's comparable to a Bandaid on a severed femoral artery when it comes to Medicaid in Mississipp­i.

Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

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