Five Myths About
Medicaid Expansion
As
the deadline to pass a budget approaches, Virginians will likely hear that state
government could shut down because of a stalemate over expanding Virginia’s
Medicaid program as encouraged by the Affordable Care Act. I would like
to clear up a few misconceptions.
Myth #1 – Virginia’s
Medicaid Stalemate Is a Partisan Dispute
There
have been media reports that the Medicaid expansion fight is a Democrat-versus-Republican
battle. It is not.
Three Republican state senators have proposed a
compromise to use private insurance to expand Medicaid, similar to Republican
proposals in Arkansas and Indiana. All but one of Virginia’s 52
Democratic legislators have indicated they would accept this, but the Republican
leadership of the House of Delegates has refused to accept this
compromise.
Medicaid expansion has been accepted or proposed by the Republican governors
and legislatures of Arizona, Ohio, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico,
Indiana, Pennsylvania and Utah and it is not a partisan issue. Similar to
the federal government shutdown last fall, Virginia’s budget is stalled because
the conservative wing of the Republican party is battling moderate Republicans
and Democrats.
Myth #2 – Medicaid
Expansion Costs State Taxpayer Money
The
federal government will pay 100% of the cost of Medicaid expansion in the first
few years phased down to 90% in the out years. This means about $5
million per day from the federal Government and over $750 million lost through
today by failing to act.
Multiple
experts project Medicaid expansion will save Virginia taxpayers about $200
million per biennium because the federal government will pay 90-100% of the
cost of prison healthcare, charity healthcare at university hospitals (e.g. the
University of Virginia and the Medical College of Virginia), community service
board programs (mental health), free clinics and other Virginia-taxpayer funded
programs.
Medicaid
expansion will also create 30,000 new jobs which generates additional tax revenues
for the state as those workers earn and spend money.
Myth #3
–Virginia’s Medicaid System Is Rife with Fraud
Virginia’s
Medicaid Fraud unit (MFCU) recovered a little over $11 million of roughly $8
billion spent by the state last biennium. This means that fraud in
Virginia's existing Medicaid program is less than two-tenths of one percent
(.2%). While the MFCU has taken the lead
on several national fraud cases such as national drug settlements, that does
not equate to widespread fraud in Virginia’s system.
Myth #4 – Medicaid
Expansion Can Be Resolved Outside the Budget Process
In
the five years I have served, major Virginia Medicaid reforms have been
legislated in the state budget instead of separate legislation. For
example, Medicaid managed care, which is a system under which private health care
plan covers and manages patient care, was authorized in the 2011
budget. In 2013, we created the Medicaid Innovation and Reform
Commission (MIRC) to approve changes and expand Medicaid.
Medicaid
expansion must be included in the budget because it would free up about $200
million of taxpayer dollars - funds that must be reappropriated to schools and
public safety now, not in twelve months.
Also,
aside from precedent, the House Republican leadership has shown no support for
expanding Medicaid. Separating expansion from the budget is like starting
a negotiation after the contract has been signed.
Myth #5 – The Federal
Government Can "Bait and Switch"
Several
legislators have state that once Virginia commits, the federal government could
reduce its share from 90% to 50%, leave Virginia taxpayers "holding the
bag" and locked into to a more expensive program. This is misleading.
The
federal government sent Governor McAuliffe a letter stating that Virginia is
free to withdraw from a Medicaid expansion at any time. Second, the Supreme
Court of United States specifically held that requiring states to expand their
Medicaid programs is unconstitutionally coercive. Some people apparently cannot accept the U.S.
Supreme Court as sufficient authority.
In previous columns and on my blog at scottsurovell.blogspot.com
I have written about the importance of Medicaid to people's health, health care
facilities, long-term care and our society in general. Medicaid is an important health insurance
program for many reasons and it would be a tragedy for our state to leave this
gaping hole in our health care system.
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