Providers Brace for Medi-Cal Rate Cut, Hold Concerns About Access to Care

Providers Brace for Medi-Cal Rate Cut, Hold Concerns About Access to Care

Dustin Corcoran of the California Medical Association, Jan Emerson Shea of the California Hospital Association, San Diego otolaryngologist Ted Mazer and Norman Williams of the California Department of Health Care Services spoke with California Healthline about the implications and implementation of the 10% Medi-Cal provider reimbursement rate cut.

In a California Healthline report by Kenny Goldberg, experts discussed how a 2011 law to cut reimbursement rates by 10% for all providers of Medi-Cal, California’s Medicaid program.

At a time when California is poised to expand Medi-Cal to 1.4 million more Californians, the demand on many physicians is expected to rise while Medi-Cal reimbursement rates fall (though federal reimbursement could actually bump up rates for two years for primary care providers).

Provider groups are concerned that physicians may stop seeing Medi-Cal patients, creating an inability to access health care for many Californians. State officials don’t believe that will happen.

The report includes comments from:

You can download a PDF transcript of this report.

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