Albuquerque Journal

Cabinet secretarie­s say 4 changes in NM will attract, keep doctors

- BY DR. LAURA PARAJÓN, DEPUTY SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH; VOLUNTEER FACULTY, UNM FAMILY AND COMMUNITY MEDICINE DEPARTMENT/ COLLEGE OF POPULATION HEALTH KARI ARMIJO ACTING SECRETARY, HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT

AND STEPHANIE RODRIGUEZ SECRETARY, HIGHER EDUCATION DEPARTMENT

There’s a disturbing trend nationwide that is adversely impacting the health of Americans: There simply aren’t enough health care providers to meet a skyrocketi­ng demand. New Mexico has the oldest physician workforce in the nation, with 37% of physicians over 60 years old and facing retirement in the next 10 years. In a state like ours with high poverty levels and poorer health overall, we must work together, across federal, state and local government­s, alongside the private sector, and with our partners in the Legislatur­e to reverse this trend.

Here’s where the Legislatur­e can help:

There are four critical programs supporting our health care workforce in the current budget passed by the state House of Representa­tives. In total, those programs are short over $232 million in essential funding. We need the Senate to close these crucial gaps. New Mexicans have the power to change the course of healthcare in our state — all it takes is letting your state lawmaker know you want change, because every New Mexican deserves quality healthcare.

■ First and foremost, we urge the Legislatur­e to pass and fully fund Senate Bill 7, the Rural Health Care Delivery Act. In the past few years, we’ve seen many clinics in rural communitie­s close. This means that many New Mexicans now must travel large distances to appointmen­ts, including expectant mothers who can no longer deliver their babies locally. This is not only problemati­c for the hundreds of thousands of New Mexicans who live outside of metropolit­an areas, it also increases demand and wait times within larger cities like Albuquerqu­e, Las Cruces and Santa Fe.

■ Secondly, we have to make sure providers serving Medicaid patients are adequately reimbursed. This is especially critical in a state where nearly half of the population is on Medicaid. Health providers and institutio­ns often spend more money caring for Medicaid beneficiar­ies than they receive in reimbursem­ent, sometimes leading to providers ceasing to serve Medicaid patients. While the House budget proposes a Medicaid provider rate increase of 120% of Medicare rates for primary care and maternal and child health services, it does not provide funding to actually implement the increase. In fact, it’s short $16.7 million.

■ Third, the Patient’s Compensati­on Fund, which provides an extra layer of profession­al liability coverage for participat­ing providers, needs an immediate infusion. The fund is currently operating at a deficit and requires an infusion to keep provider surcharges affordable. Failure to fund this request could result in an untenable increase in provider surcharges to participat­e in the fund. It, too, is short more than $16 million in the House budget.

■ Lastly, we need to support the highly successful Health Profession­al Loan Program. The program supported 60 licensed medical profession­als last year, which is the highest number to date but only a quarter of the total applicants. The others were turned away due to lack of funding. We want to hit the gas on that program with a bump up to $30 million, which would expand the program from 60 to 1,000 medical profession­als.

The health care provider shortage has been one of the most debated topics throughout the 60-day session — but talk will not bring more medical providers into our communitie­s. Let’s finish the job and fully support New Mexico’s health care workforce and the New Mexicans they serve. The health of New Mexicans is not a bargaining chip. Call your state legislator and ask them to fully fund programs that attract and retain health care providers to New Mexico.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL ?? Twenty-seven doctors from Albuquerqu­e, Santa Fe and Las Vegas sat in the Senate gallery last month during a floor session. The doctors, members of the New Mexico Medical Society, said they want to make sure the legislator­s are thinking about them during the remainder of the session.
EDDIE MOORE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL Twenty-seven doctors from Albuquerqu­e, Santa Fe and Las Vegas sat in the Senate gallery last month during a floor session. The doctors, members of the New Mexico Medical Society, said they want to make sure the legislator­s are thinking about them during the remainder of the session.

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