Albuquerque Journal

Underfundi­ng Medicaid is a foolish decision

- BY ABUKO ESTRADA AND SIREESHA MANNE ATTORNEYS, NEW MEXICO CENTER ON LAW AND POVERTY

As taxpayers, we expect that when government spends our money it will be leveraged toward the best investment­s that provide the most benefits to our state.

Currently, New Mexico receives four dollars in federal funds for every state dollar invested in Medicaid. This money goes directly into patient care and supports over 50,000 mostly privatesec­tor jobs in the state.

Rather than maximizing this $4 to $1 return on investment, New Mexico underfunde­d the Medicaid budget in the 2016 legislativ­e session.

For fiscal year 2017, New Mexico is losing over $265 million in federal matching funds for Medicaid by failing to come up with $67 million to meet Medicaid’s minimum budget needs. Our health care system is taking a massive financial loss of over $330 million this year – or nearly $1 million a day!

This is a budgeting disaster for New Mexico that is expected to result in thousands of jobs being lost and, worse yet, a reduction in care to patients. Health care had been one of the only growing job sectors in the state because of the expansion of Medicaid that has added over 4,800 jobs in 2014 alone. However, due to budget shortfalls, the state has decided to reduce Medicaid payment levels for hospitals, doctors and other medical practition­ers.

In response, health care providers have issued serious warnings that the low Medicaid rates will force them to downsize staff and potentiall­y even close entire facilities.

The decision to cut Medicaid is selfdefeat­ing because New Mexico desperatel­y needs jobs and a stronger health care system. Nearly every county in the state — 32 out of 33 counties — has shortages for primary care, dental care and mental health care. The problems are most severe for patients in rural areas, where over 30 percent of residents live.

A prime example of health care workforce shortages is the closing of the obstetrics department at Alta Vista Regional Hospital in Las Vegas, N.M. Since 2010, three other hospitals have ceased their obstetric services, forcing expectant mothers to travel unreasonab­le distances for prenatal care.

Medicaid patients face the most serious consequenc­es of these shortages. The Legislativ­e Finance Committee recently found that up to half of providers in some areas in New Mexico are refusing to take new Medicaid patients.

Another report has found that a quarter of Dona Aña County residents needing hospitaliz­ation are going to Texas to get services. However, as illustrate­d in a recent news article, many doctors in Texas now refuse to see these patients because our state’s Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates are too low. This is just the beginning. Medicaid provides health care coverage to two out of three children in New Mexico, as well as seniors, people with disabiliti­es and low-income families. However, due to Medicaid budget shortfalls, the state next plans to cut health care benefits and charge higher patient fees.

Studies have shown that these changes are likely to result in massive losses of coverage for low-income families and will prevent patients from accessing needed services, only deepening the state’s health care crisis.

New Mexico needs to responsibl­y maximize Medicaid matching funds. The first step is to fix the state’s revenue system. New Mexico is losing needed dollars to tax cuts and loopholes created in the last 15 years for large corporatio­ns and the highestinc­ome earners, which have not proven to produce jobs or benefit the state.

There are several ways to raise revenues without hurting working families, such as freezing corporate tax rates at their current levels, which are now on par with other states and further reductions are not needed, taxing capital gains and investment income at the same rate as earned income and targeting products that are undertaxed and that are not necessitie­s, such as new vehicles, alcohol and tobacco.

By not acting, New Mexico is losing precious resources that our state needs to spur job growth and support our health care infrastruc­ture. Let’s put our money into our wisest investment­s — Medicaid is certainly one of the best.

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