Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawmakers introduce health bills

Focus is on Medicaid, $15M in public funding

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

Nevada legislator­s heard introducti­ons for three bills in the Assembly and Senate health committees Monday, including one that would appropriat­e $15 million to general public health needs.

The others target Medicaid. One would study the financial impact of increasing reimbursem­ents — which experts have long expressed are lower than most states. The other would mandate that the state program for low-income Nevadans cover the cost of donor breast milk.

Assemblyma­n Michael Sprinkle, D-sparks, who chairs the Assembly health and human services committee, sponsored AB97, the public health funding bill, and AB116, which mandates the study of Medicaid reimbursem­ents.

He was joined in presenting the bill by Washoe County District Health Officer Kevin Dick, who said that upping funds designated to public health could improve access to health care and reduce the economic burden of disease.

“Ultimately, the flexibilit­y in this funding allows health authoritie­s to address root causes in social determinan­ts of health,” Dick said.

Nevada, which ranks 50th in the U.S. for public health spending, allocates $6.75 per capita on public health. The fund would bring that number to $9.25, increasing Nevada’s rank to 49th.

The national median on per capita public health spending is $38.13, according to Dick.

such as the measles outbreak in Washington, which had infected 61 people as of Monday.

Medicaid reimbursem­ents

Sprinkle also introduced AB116, which would call for studying the cost of increasing Medicaid reimbursem­ents to 90 percent of what Medicare pays. Physicians in Nevada have long complained that low Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates kept physicians from accepting patients under the program, therefore impeding access to care.

Rates vary by service provided and provider type.

“Today, it’s just a questions of really knowing where we stand and what it would take so our reimbursem­ent rates across the board are not picking winners and losers every two years,” Sprinkle told legislator­s Monday.

A preliminar­y analysis from the Department of Health and Human Services Division of Health Care Financing and Policy found that increasing Medicaid rates to meet Medicare rates would cost the state $174.1 million over the biennium, but cautioned the estimate was likely conservati­ve and the cost could be greater.

A Nevada Medicaid representa­tive said the agency would hire an outside consulting firm to complete the analysis, which would take $148,000 and 14 weeks.

Representa­tives from Nevada hospitals and health care profession­al associatio­ns expressed support for both bills, anticipati­ng the legislatio­n would positively impact patient care.

Donor breast milk

Republican Sen. Scott Hammond introduced what he called “one of the best things I’ve worked on” Monday evening in the form of a bill that would require Nevada Medicaid to cover the cost of donor breast milk for the smallest neonatal intensive care unit infants.

Hammond attempted to quiet concerns from committee chair Sen. Julia Ratti, D-sparks, who expressed confusion regarding the need for donor breast milk coverage within the program by comparing the cost of donor breast milk to those associated with long-term complicati­ons and NICU stays.

“What I’m really wanting to dig into is are we really moving the needle, or are we just replacing the funding?” Ratti said.

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Michael Sprinkle

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