California has a lot to lose if Trump slashes Medicaid. Seniors, kids and more could face coverage cuts
This article is part of a partnership between the Mendocino Voice and nonprofit newsroom CalMatters to bring relevant nonpartisan news to
That spending plan sets up significant cuts to Medicaid, the health insurance program for low-income people.
Looking for a way to offset the cost of extending President
The
At this point, it's not clear which Medicaid services would be cut or how many people exactly would lose coverage because lawmakers can hit the spending reductions in a number of ways.
Still, enrollees, health advocates and providers in
Their outcries echo the first Trump administration, when in 2017
"These cuts would rip care away from children, seniors, disabled Californians, and more while raising costs for everyone, all to give tax breaks to the ultra-wealthy,"
Medicaid is the backbone of
Since 2014, the state has expanded the program big time — first to more adults allowed in the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, and gradually to low-income immigrants, regardless of their legal status. Cuts to the scale that
Hospitals, doctors and county officials are also speaking out against the proposed cuts because Medicaid is a key payer, especially for those located in rural areas or communities with high poverty rates. If these facilities can't keep their doors open, entire communities, not just people enrolled in Medicaid, could lose access.
House Speaker
Cuts would leave big budget hole for state
Medicaid accounts for a significant portion of states' budgets. The program is jointly funded by the federal government and states, meaning federal cuts would leave major budget gaps that would force reductions in services and enrollment, and also could trigger cuts to other state programs.
Based on proposals that
A big question mark is how exactly
They've proposed imposing work requirements, for example. The idea behind that is enrollment would drop as people who don't meet the requirements get kicked off the program. But the spending reductions from such a policy would not get
A second proposal would require restructuring the program so that instead of the federal government paying states a fixed percentage of Medicaid costs, it could set a spending cap per enrollee.
Under the Affordable Care Act,
"One reason that these types of cuts are popular among federal policy makers is because…it really allows the blame to be placed on governors and state legislatures," Park said. "The federal government is cutting federal funding, making it harder for states to finance their share of the cost of Medicaid, but it's not actually saying 'You have to cut eligibility in this way or cut provider rates in this way.'"
"It's really, 'States, you figure it out, you have to balance your budget,'" Park added. "And you know, there's only three choices: higher taxes, cutting the rest of the budget, which is primarily education in
Coverage for seniors and people with disabilities
Traditional Medicare does not cover services including dental, vision and hearing benefits. Seniors typically have to buy into a Medicare Advantage plan to get that covered. Low-income seniors in
Nursing home stays and in-home care are also largely covered by Medicaid. Nationally, about 6 in 10 nursing home residents are covered by Medicaid, according to an analysis by KFF, a health polling and research organization.
"Medicare has huge gaps in coverage and Medicare is really expensive," said
Because of their high needs, seniors and people with disabilities are the most costly population. In
"So if the state wants to go where the money is, that's seniors and people with disabilities. That's long-term care, nursing home care, community-based services," said Park. To protect the coverage of this population, he said, the state would have to consider potentially making larger cuts for other groups of people.
A safety net for
More than 5 million kids in
Getting kids insured has long been a priority for
Perhaps less known is that
"The rates of depression and anxiety among youth are rising at alarming rates, and for many,
"If we want kids to have a healthy start, that means making sure that their birthing parent has access to health care," said
Supported by the
This article first appeared at CalMatters here.
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