Fort Bragg Advocate-News

Clinics say new medicaid program will force them to cut services

- By Samantha Young

SACRAMENTO » California’s sweeping new program to buy prescripti­on drugs for its nearly 14 million Medicaid patients has alarmed health clinics that say they will lose money and have to cut services.

Gov. Gavin Newsom acknowledg­ed Monday that some clinics, which serve the poorest California­ns, would lose funding, and he included $105 million for them in the 2022-23 proposed state budget he unveiled in the state capital.

But the allocation falls far short of what clinic officials say they need to keep critical health care services funded in some of California’s neediest areas. California’s federally qualified health centers, which operate more than 1,000 clinics across the state, have filed a lawsuit in federal court to exempt them from the program, but a judge on Monday denied their request for a temporary reprieve while the lawsuit proceeds.

“People are going to be laid off; services are going to be cut,” said Anthony White, president of the Community Health Center Alliance for Patient Access, a statewide organizati­on of federally qualified health centers. “It’s going to decrease access for our patients.”

The drug program, known as Medi-Cal Rx, debuted Jan. 1 and is one of Newsom’s key health care initiative­s. It takes the responsibi­lity for prescripti­on drug coverage in the state’s Medicaid program away from managedcar­e plans and puts it into the hands of a state contractor.

On his first day in office in 2019, Newsom promised the overhaul would deliver better health care for patients and generate “substantia­l annual savings” because the state would negotiate lower prices as one of the largest drug purchasers in the country.

The Newsom administra­tion anticipate­s the state will save $414 million in the 2022-23 budget year and nearly two times that amount in the next one, said Keely Martin Bosler, director of the California Department of Finance.

California’s health clinics, however, could lose up to $200 million a year in drug reimbursem­ents, White estimated, money they have been using to care for patients with asthma, HIV and other chronic health problems. The reimbursem­ent money is a key revenue stream for clinics, but they rely primarily on federal grants for their funding, in addition to some patient revenue and private donations.

At issue is money the clinics have received through a federal prescripti­on drug savings program known as “340B.” The 340B program requires drug manufactur­ers participat­ing in Medicaid to offer deep discounts to certain providers that care for underserve­d and uninsured people, including health clinics. The health centers, in turn, must use that money to expand health care services.

Beginning Jan. 1, California started buying prescripti­on drugs for all its lowincome and disabled residents enrolled in Medi-Cal, the country’s largest Medicaid

program. Because the state expects to get bigger discounts on drugs than the roughly two dozen MediCal managed-care insurance plans did, clinics expect to receive less 340B money.

The $105 million Newsom earmarked for health clinics in his budget proposal to offset their losses was not intended to fully replace them, said Michelle Baass, director of the state Department of Health Care Services, which administer­s Medi-Cal, in the state’s Jan. 5 response to the clinics’ lawsuit.

“Plaintiffs have no entitlemen­t to continued profits from selling marked up 340B drugs,” she wrote.

The funding Newsom proposed is not guaranteed. Indeed, it is now subject to the annual budget negotiatio­n process. The legislatur­e has until June 15 to negotiate with Newsom and adopt a deal. The 2022-23 state budget takes effect July 1.

Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state’s Health and Human Services Agency, said the administra­tion has been working with clinics and is open to further discussion­s.

“We’re always happy to sit down and try to understand what the conditions are today,” Ghaly said.

California Healthline’s Angela Hart contribute­d to this report.

 ?? ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS ?? An East Palo Alto resident is inoculated during a COVID-19vaccinat­ion clinic run by Ravenswood Family Health Network at Facebook headquarte­rs in Menlo Park on April 10, 2021. Ravenswood clinics serve low-income population­s with more than half of their patients participat­ing in Medi-Cal and other public health care programs.
ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS An East Palo Alto resident is inoculated during a COVID-19vaccinat­ion clinic run by Ravenswood Family Health Network at Facebook headquarte­rs in Menlo Park on April 10, 2021. Ravenswood clinics serve low-income population­s with more than half of their patients participat­ing in Medi-Cal and other public health care programs.
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