Politico...
Medicaid
cuts could come from
Democrats
By J. Lester Feder
6/28/11
Defenders
of Medicaid have been
fighting hard against Republican proposals to cut the program, but
they’re just
waking up to the threat of one proposed by the Obama administration.
It’s
an idea to change the way federal
matching funds work and save money in the process — and it would
probably do it
by shifting costs to the states. If that happens, Medicaid advocates
fear, the
states will just pass on the cuts to providers and, ultimately, the
patients.
In
the budget blueprint unveiled in
April, President Barack Obama proposed adjusting the way federal
matching funds
paid to the states are calculated for Medicaid and its companion, the
Children’s Health Insurance Program. Sources close to the
administration tell
POLITICO that White House officials have been trying to develop the
idea into a
version that could become part of a deal in the ongoing deficit
reduction
talks.
Today,
state dollars in these programs
are matched at different rates for different populations. For the
Medicaid
population, under the matching formula known as the Federal Medical
Assistance
Percentages, the federal government pays an average of about 57 percent
of the
national costs. For CHIP, the rate is about 70 percent.
And
when the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act expands Medicaid coverage starting in 2014, the
federal
government will initially pick up all of the costs of the new
population
entering the program, then scale back to 90 percent in later years.
The
administration wants to create
what’s known as a “blended rate” for these programs, recalculating the
levels
so states receive federal dollars at the same rate for all populations
in joint
state-federal health programs. And in the process, they want to
contribute to
Medicaid savings totaling $100 billion.
This
has Sen. Jay Rockefeller
(D-W.Va.) nervous.
“What
we know is that in order to
generate ‘at least $100 billion’ in savings, any blended-rate proposal
would
have to severely reduce federal Medicaid and CHIP payments to every
state over
time, with some losing a lot more than others,” Rockefeller said. “And
the
underlying needs and costs don’t disappear — they just move from the
federal
side of the ledger to the state side.”
“Such
a substantial cost shift to
already financially strapped states would force states to reduce or
eliminate
Medicaid coverage, cut provider payments even more and completely
undermine the
Children’s Health Insurance Program. This is not a viable option and
would
spawn a formula fight among the states,” he said.
Read
the rest of the story at Politico
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