Fiscal Issues Could Put Medicaid Expansion in Jeopardy

Fiscal Issues Could Put Medicaid Expansion in Jeopardy

The health care overhaul relies on a significant expansion of Medicaid to reduce the uninsured population. Budgetary pressures that have forced many states to implement cuts to Medicaid ahead of the expansion and uncertainty about federal funding have raised questions about the plan's viability.

The health care overhaul was predicated on a significant expansion of access to Medicaid. Under the new reform law, the nationwide eligibility threshold for the program will increase to 133% of the federal poverty level in 2014. At least 16 million currently uninsured U.S. residents are expected to be added to the program.

The federal government will fully subsidize new Medicaid beneficiaries between 2014 and 2016.  In subsequent years, the government’s contribution will diminish and states’ share of Medicaid spending will rise.

At the same time, governors just wrapped up their most significant round of budget cutbacks since the Great Depression, as combined state budgets fell by more than 10% between fiscal year 2008 and FY 2010. State budget deficits are projected to top more than $350 billion across the next two years.

“It’s like living in a parallel universe,” according to Monica Coury, an assistant director at Arizona’s Health Care Cost Containment System. “On the one hand, we have federal partners talking about expansion of this program. And at the state level, we’re looking at a program that we can’t sustain.”

States Anxiously Await FMAP Extension

Many state budgets had been partially bolstered by a $90 billion infusion to Medicaid programs through the $787 billion federal stimulus package. Most states used the Medicaid funds to cover caseload increases and maintain services and eligibility criteria or to avoid cutting payments to hospitals and physicians. Some states — like North Carolina and Ohio — reported using the funds exclusively for general fund needs.

However, the funds will no longer be available beginning in January 2011. Efforts to continue the additional Medicaid funding through the so-called “extenders” legislation (HR 4213) have stalled in the Senate.

In the meantime, many states are coming up with contingency plans. Some have been forced to undertake severe cuts because legislators have run out of savings and reserve accounts to tap. According to Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire (D), most governors already used up their rainy-day funds “because we considered it to be pouring down rain.”

In Massachusetts, Gov. Deval Patrick (D) says he will be forced to cut a program that provides limited health benefits to nearly 25,000 documented immigrants — although the program would likely be resurrected when new federal funds flow for health coverage in 2014, the Globe notes. To balance its budget, Texas is planning a 1% cut to physicians’ Medicaid reimbursement beginning in September.

California’s own budget is in gridlock, with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) proposing major cuts in an effort to close the state’s $19.1 billion budget deficit. Citing a UC-Berkeley report, which details how the proposed budget would extensively affect the state’s Health and Human Services department, Anthony Wright of Health Access warns that the cuts would be “the worst possible choice for our economy.”

Downstream Effects

This budgetary yo-yoing could weaken public programs and drive providers out of Medicaid, leaving the nation’s health care system in worse shape entering 2014.

For example, many primary care physicians are opting out of Medicaid, which could drive more newly insured patients to emergency departments, further boosting overcrowding and reducing access. The situation is especially acute in Texas, where fewer than one-third of primary care physicians currently accept Medicaid, according to a survey by the state’s physician association. More physicians say they will pull out of the program if the state’s planned reimbursement cuts stand.

Meanwhile, U.S. residents who lose access to providers because of budget cuts might need more health care services when they are newly insured again in 2014, after several years going without coverage. Community health clinics that serve hundreds of thousands of state residents may go without payment if California’s budget impasse lasts all summer.

In the meantime, here’s a look at what else is happening in health reform.

In Financial News

On Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage

In Public Opinion

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