Experts say Gov. Tate Reeves' plan will help hospitals, but not uninsured Mississippians
Gov.
However, even some health care experts were stumped by how the Governor's proposed reforms will work.
The plan, which Reeves announced at a press conference Thursday while flanked by state health care leaders, is essentially a complex scheme to increase extra payments hospitals get for treating patients on Medicaid — and notably doesn't include Medicaid expansion.
Some
The announcement comes less than two months before
Two things were clear at the conference: Reeves claims the changes would put a much-needed
Everything else, however, was not as easy to understand.
How will
The plan relies on two major changes that bolster supplemental payments to hospitals for the care they provide to people with Medicaid. Supplemental payments are extra payments hospitals receive to offset low Medicaid reimbursement rates or uncompensated care, which is money hospitals lose caring for patients who are uninsured and can't pay their hospital bill. Medicaid is a federal-state program that provides health coverage to millions of people in the
The first is a change to the Mississippi Hospital Access Program, which typically pays hospitals for the gap between payments for services rendered for Medicaid managed care patients (which are usually lower) and Medicare patients (which are usually slightly higher). Under the proposed changes, hospitals will instead be paid for the gap between Medicaid patients and people insured by commercial plans, which tend to reimburse at higher rates.
The state
What's not clear is how, in Reeves' plan, the average commercial rate results in nearly triple what hospitals typically get for these payments — going from a total of
When asked what had changed since the spring regarding these rates, Medicaid Executive Director
"I think the difference is, we got the right people in the room … sometimes it makes sense to get a second opinion," he said before stepping back in line on stage.
The second initiative modifies the Upper Payment Limit Supplemental Payments, which are aimed at also increasing payments for hospitals that receive low payments from Medicaid. This program will yield an increase of an additional
State leaders did something similar earlier this year after the Mississippi Hospital Access Program projections came in much lower than originally expected, said
The supplemental payment programs are meant to reduce disparities in insurance payments and the cost of caring for uninsured people. By changing them, the state is drawing down more federal money because of our state's high Federal Medical Assistance Percentage match, which is the highest in the country at 77.27% because of our state's high poverty rate. Hospitals have to put up more in "bed taxes" for the state portion, and then the federal government matches.
In other words, if a Medicaid patient receives a service at a
In short, hospitals will have to pay
Who will the plan help?
Experts agree this plan will keep hospitals open for longer. Even if it's unclear how the expected payments will increase, it's still a significant amount of money — money that hospitals have been asking for for a long time. However, critics say it's not ensuring more people receive health care.
According to federal data,
Emergency rooms by law cannot turn down people, regardless of their insurance status, who come for care — but doctors' offices can and so can pharmacies. That means people who are uninsured in
"People typically need a lot more care than care in a hospital, and a lot of that care is preventive care… outpatient care," said
"And Medicaid expansion is about financial security for families."
How much money is it bringing to hospitals?
Reeves said a little over
And although he said Thursday the money would benefit all hospitals, it appears larger hospitals will benefit most, even though most agree that small rural hospitals are the facilities feeling the strain of the health care crisis most acutely.
Additionally, nearly half of the money — 45% or about
Most of those hospitals' leaders stood behind Reeves as he announced his plan Thursday.
Is this a new plan?
Reeves said at the press conference this plan has been in the works for four to five months.
According to
A year ago, Moore learned of similar measures in
Will it cost the taxpayers anything?
Reeves repeated at the conference that the changes would come at no cost to taxpayers, though he noted Snyder and his division employees are paid by state tax dollars.
That's mostly true — taxpayers will likely not feel the brunt of this big tax increase for hospitals, according to one expert. Even if hospital charges increase, it should be eaten by the insurance companies and services for people who are uninsured will continue to go uncompensated and be claimed as charity care.
Is it final?
The plan is being submitted to the
It's hard to say what the likelihood of approval is, though several other states have passed similar Medicaid reforms intended to draw down more federal dollars.
One expert said it was unlikely that
How is this different from Medicaid expansion?
Medicaid expansion has long been pointed to as a solution to the state's worsening hospital crisis. Republican state leadership – Reeves most prominently – has staunchly opposed the policy adoption, despite support from a majority of Mississippians.
At the press conference Thursday, Reeves repeatedly incorrectly referred to the program as "welfare," and claimed the solution to the issue was putting more people in the workforce. He said if more people are added to Medicaid's rolls, hospitals will keep losing money because Medicaid payments are so low.
That's better than losing money on people who are uninsured, said
"These are two disconnected things," he said. "Reimbursement rates for hospitals and expanding Medicaid are completely separate issues."
While hospital leaders agree that these policy reforms will make a huge difference for many hospitals in the state, it still might not be enough to single handedly solve the crisis. In other states, such as
The way Moore sees it, the state is putting up
States that have not expanded Medicaid have been offered a financial incentive to do so — an estimated
And, despite more hospitals that will probably be able to stay open as a result of these reforms, uninsured Mississippians still won't have health care. That means they will have to continue to rely on emergency rooms for their medical care — the most expensive place to receive health care — and uncompensated care costs will continue.
Searing said these reforms "improve the financial bottom line for some hospitals" and keep them open longer, but people are still going without health coverage.
"You're really not solving the problem," he said. "You're just putting a Band-Aid on one aspect of it."
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Experts say Gov. Tate Reeves' plan will help hospitals, but not uninsured Mississippians
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