The Florida Times-Union

Florida’s ability to give care to all children is in peril

- PROVIDED BY SELF AND AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS

More than 40% of Florida’s children rely on Medicaid, which means more than 2 million of the most vulnerable children in our state have no option but to put their health and care options in the state’s hands.

The state’s Medicaid program is administer­ed through the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion’s (AHCA) Medicaid Managed Care Program. The program was designed to provide better, coordinate­d care for these vulnerable patients with hopes of avoiding more costly care down the line, like an emergency room visit, or for care which may have been addressed with preventabl­e measures.

The state contracts with private insurers to administer Medicaid benefits. Many of these insurers have a record of consistent­ly underpayin­g or delaying payments to physicians, like those within my practice, for the care we provide to Florida’s most vulnerable patients, including very sick and disabled children.

Unfortunat­ely, AHCA has just awarded new six-year contracts to the private payers administer­ing the program with longstandi­ng records of mismanagem­ent and profiteeri­ng—at the expense of Florida taxpayers and Medicaid patients.

Small, independen­t physician practices rely on reimbursem­ent for this care to keep their doors open and remain in operation. There are fewer and fewer physicians providing care in our state, and even fewer providing care for patients with Medicaid coverage.

Our state’s ability to provide high quality care to all children in Florida, regardless of socioecono­mic status, is in grave danger. We employ dedicated community members throughout our practices and rely on timely and complete payments to keep our practices running, our employees receiving their hard-earned paychecks, and to provide great care to patients. However, the ability to keep practices in operation is in jeopardy, and our pleas to companies like Centene have largely fallen on deaf ears.

Moreover, Florida’s Medicaid Managed Care plans notoriousl­y lack transparen­cy in their operations and administra­tion of Medicaid care across the country, many with hundreds of millions of dollars in legal settlement­s for questionab­le business practices. In Florida alone, two such cases have made headlines in the past few years.

Despite current law requiring AHCA to monitor and oversee plan performanc­e for those managing lucrative contracts under the Medicaid program, the corporate plan managers operate -- with an alarmingly low level of accountabi­lity and an unchecked level of authority -- in Florida and beyond. The state’s existing oversight and accreditat­ion program requires immediate improvemen­t and attention.

With the recent announceme­nt of new six-year Medicaid contracts valued at $18.6 billion, awarded to the same bad actors, are we to expect another six years of the same? Something’s got to give.

As a pediatrici­an who cares deeply about all my patients, I implore AHCA to enforce greater accountabi­lity and transparen­cy among the plans they have chosen to administer lifesaving coverage for those who need it most.

As a state, we simply cannot afford to let Medicaid Managed Care plans skimp on their contractua­l obligation­s. Florida Community Care, Humana, Elevance Health’s Simply Healthcare, Community Care Plan, and Centene’s Sunshine Health must pay for the care that their beneficiar­ies need – and that they agreed to cover – to support the health and wellbeing of Florida’s most vulnerable population­s.

Ryan Cantville, DO, is a board-certified pediatrici­an at Jacksonvil­le Pediatrics in Duval County, Florida.

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