Chattanooga Times Free Press

Health care policy in the spotlight for lawmakers

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER

“Health care has become one of the top issues in the state as well as the U.S.” – STATE REP. CAMERON SEXTON, R-CROSSVILLE

Tennessee’s state legislator­s braced for another busy year in health care policy as the General Assembly kicked off its second year of the session this week.

And although consensus on how to tackle big issues may vary, concern for the health of the state’s residents touches both sides of the aisle.

“Health care has become one of the top issues in the state as well as the U.S.,” said Rep. Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, chairman of the House Health Committee. “There’s a lot of concerns out there by providers and patients, and trying to strike the right balance between all those entities is very key to finding the right solutions.”

Health and social services make up the largest portion — 45 percent — of the state’s budget, followed by education at 29 percent, yet Tennessee consistent­ly ranks in the bottom nationally on key health indicators, according to a health and budget policy report released this week by the nonprofit Sycamore Institute.

But with many stakeholde­rs and concerns on the table, here are a few issues to watch this season in the wake of week one:

MEDICAID

From protests calling for its expansion on Tuesday to the Trump administra­tion’s go-ahead Thursday allowing states to issue work requiremen­ts for able-bodied enrollees, it’s hard to escape chatter about the health insurance program Medicaid, better known in the state as TennCare.

Medicaid, along with the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers an estimated 1.6 million low-income children, pregnant mothers, parents, caretakers and disabled Tennessean­s. However, the left and many advocates argue the program could insure more people if state legislator­s accepted federal dollars offered through the Affordable Care Act to expand the program.

“The legislatur­e has blocked Gov. [Bill] Haslam from using federal health funds, funds that Tennessean­s send to Washington as tax dollars, to address the health needs of our state,” said Bill Zechman, a McMinnvill­e health insurance agent.

Zechman was one of several health care organizati­on representa­tives who called on lawmakers to reconsider Medicaid expansion in a teleconfer­ence on Tuesday.

But Senate Speaker Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, told reporters during a discussion with other top GOP leaders that he doesn’t see much support for Medicaid expansion.

“I think there’s a lot of concern about the impact it would have on the health system, as well as the budget,” he said. “The devil’s in the details.”

RURAL HEALTH CARE

Provider shortages, transporta­tion issues, economic challenges and higher rates of chronic disease create significan­t health challenges for rural Tennessean­s, who make up about 22 percent of the state’s population.

Since 2010, Tennessee has lost 10 rural hospitals — the highest rate of rural hospital closures in the nation — and many more are at risk of closing or strain to stay afloat.

Champions of Medicaid expansion blame the closures on costs of providing uncompensa­ted care to high volumes of uninsured, would-be beneficiar­ies, but McNally and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bo Watson, R-Hixson, say it’s not that simple.

“A lot of the rural hospitals, it’s very difficult for them to survive in today’s environmen­t and that’s partially due to the patient mix they see,” McNally said, adding that because they have a high percentage of Medicare and Medicaid patients “it’s difficult to survive.”

He and Watson, also a Senate Health Committee member and director of Sports Medicine and Therapy Services at Parkridge Medical Center, cited a lack of “economy of scale” because of the low number of patients in rural areas.

“A lot of the cost of running a hospital in the 21st century is operationa­l efficienci­es that require a level of sophistica­tion that many of the rural areas don’t have,” added Watson, noting that a rural hospital chief executive officer may simultaneo­usly have responsibi­lities that in a larger facility would be handled by a chief financial officer, chief operating officer and even chief nursing officer.

CHRONIC DISEASE AND ADDICTION

When looking for areas of bipartisan agreement, lawmakers are united in the belief that many of the state’s health issues are a result of “preventabl­e” conditions.

High rates of chronic diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, hypertensi­on, stroke, cancer, heart disease and depression, plague the state, and are often caused or exacerbate­d by controllab­le behaviors, such as lack of exercise, tobacco use, substance abuse and other damaging lifestyle choices.

“We’ve got to look more toward the preventati­ve health, because as Chairman Watson is seeing, health care is becoming such a huge part of our budget that if we don’t do something it’s going to be unsustaina­ble,” Sen. Becky Duncan Massey, R-Knoxville, said during a Senate Health Committee meeting on Wednesday.

Sen. Richard Briggs, R-Knoxville, pointed to the challenge of legislatin­g behaviors, “particular­ly if you’re competing eating apples with eating pizza,” but said the state’s opioid epidemic is an area needing more attention.

“The one that I think we’re really going to have to start focusing on, that legislatio­n can have an impact on, deals with this opioid crisis that we have in this state,” he said.

To date, Tennessee’s primary legislativ­e response to the crisis has focused on limiting the abundance of prescripti­on painkiller­s, which successful­ly reduced the number of opioid prescripti­ons in the state. But drug overdose death rates, now driven largely by heroin and fentanyl use, continue to rise.

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