Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Residents will suffer from Medicaid cuts in nursing homes

Program pays for most in facilities

- By Jordan Rau

The Kaiser Health News

ORANGE, Va. — Alice Jacobs, 90, once owned a factory and horses. She raised four children and buried two husbands.

But years in an assisted living center drained her savings, and now she relies on Medicaid to pay for her care at Dogwood Village, a nonprofit, county-owned nursing home here.

“You think you’ve got enough money to last all your life, and here I am,” Ms. Jacobs said.

Medicaid pays for most of the 1.4 million elderly people in nursing homes, like Ms. Jacobs. It covers 20 percent of all Americans and 40 percent of poor adults.

On Thursday, Senate Republican­s joined their House colleagues in proposing steep cuts to Medicaid, part of the effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Conservati­ves hope to roll back what they see as an expanding and costly health care entitlemen­t. But little has been said about what would happen to older Americansi­n nursing homes if these cutstook effect.

Under federal law, state Medicaid programs are required to cover nursing home care. But state officials decide how much to pay facilities, and states under budgetary pressure could decrease the amount they are willing to pay or restrict eligibilit­y for coverage.

“The states are going to make it harder to qualify medically for needing nursing home care,” predicted Toby S. Edelman, a senior policy attorney at the Center for Medicare Advocacy. “They’d have to be more disabled before they qualify for Medicaid assistance.”

States might allow nursing homes to require residents’ families to pay for a portion of their care, she added. Officials could also limit the types of services and days of nursing home care they pay for, as Medicare already does.

The 150 residents of Dogwood Village include former teachers, farmers, doctors, lawyers, stay-at-home parents and health aides — a cross section of this rural county a half-hour northeast of Charlottes­ville. Many entered old age solidly middle class but turned to Medicaid, which was once thought of as a government program exclusivel­y for the poor, after exhausting their insurance and assets.

A combinatio­n of longer life spans and spiraling health care costs has left an estimated 64 percent of the Americans in nursing homes dependent on Medicaid. In Alaska, Mississipp­i and West Virginia, Medicaid was the primary payer for three-quarters or more of nursing home residents in 2015, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“People are simply outliving their relatives and their resources, and fortunatel­y, Medicaid has been there,” said Mark Parkinson, president of the American Health Care Associatio­n, a national nursing home industry group.

With more than 70 million people enrolled in Medicaid at an annual cost of more than $500 billion, the program certainly faces longterm financial challenges. Federal Medicaid spending is projected to grow 6 percent a year on average, rising to $650 billion in 2027 from $389 billion this year, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Even if Congress does not repeal the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid will remain a target for cuts, experts say.

“The Medicaid pieces of the House bill could be incorporat­ed into other pieces of legislatio­n that are moving this year,” said Edwin Park, a vice president at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington nonprofit that focuses on how government budgets affect low-income people. “Certainly, nursing homes would be part of those cuts, not only in reimbursem­ent rates but in reductions in eligibilit­y for nursing home care.”

While most Medicaid enrollees are children, pregnant women and nonelderly adults, long-term services such as nursing homes account for 42 percent of all Medicaid spending — even though only 6 percent of Medicaid enrollees use them.

“Moms and kids aren’t wherethe money is,” said Damon Terzaghi, a senior director at the National Associatio­n of States United for Aging and Disabiliti­es, a group representi­ng state agencies that manage programs for these population­s or advocate on their behalf. “If you’re going to cut that much money out, it’s going to be coming from older people and people with disabiliti­es.”

The House health care bill targets nursing home coverage directly by requiring every state to count home equity above $560,000 in determinin­g Medicaid eligibilit­y. That would make eligibilit­y rules tougher in 10 states — mostly ones with expensive real estate markets, including California, Massachuse­tts and New York — as well as in the District of Columbia, according to an analysis by the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.

Dogwood Village receives about half of its $13 million annual operating costs from Medicaid, with rates from $168 to $170 a day. Some residents who come to the nursing home after a hospital stay are initially covered by Medicare, but if they stay longer than 100 days, that benefit ends, and those without savings move to Medicaid.

“You have patients who have spent their life savings, and they come here,” said Kristen Smith, the admissions coordinato­r. Smith said patients now are older and sicker than they used to be, frequently arriving directly from a hospital.

“It used to be hips and knee” surgeries, she said. “And now a lot of those patients are going home. What we’re seeing is more complex, sicker patients.”

Medicaid helps pay for care for people with disabiliti­es, like Nancy Huffstickl­er, 65, who has been here for four years and regards herself as “a medical disaster.”

She listed her ailments: spinal cancer in remission, restless leg syndrome, high blood pressure and multiple ulcers. She has had spinal reconstruc­tive surgery and a hip replacemen­t. She is undergoing physical therapy with the hope that one day she will be able to leave her wheelchair­and use a walker.

Ms. Huffstickl­er is fearful of Republican­s’ health care changes. “It may save the federal government money, but what about us?” she asked.

Major Medicaid cuts would compel Dogwood Village to cut staff, supplies and amenities — changes that would affect the quality of care for all residents, not just those on Medicaid.

If that does not save enough money, the nursing home might have to reduce the number of Medicaid residents, said Vernon Baker, who resigned as administra­tor in April. “It’s not like our toilet paper or paper towels are like the Ritz-Carlton’s,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States