Some Medicaid Providers Borrow or Go Into Debt Amid 'Unwinding' Payment Disruptions
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Guardian Group Montana, which owns three small facilities in rural
George said the company didn't have enough money to pay its employees. When he called state health and public assistance officials for help, he said, they told him they were swamped processing a high load of Medicaid cases, and that his residents would have to wait their turn.
"I've mentioned to some of them, 'Well what do we do if we're not being paid for four or five months? Do we have to evict the resident?'" he asked.
Instead, the company took out bank loans at 8% interest, George said.
Providers who take Medicaid have said their state payments have been disrupted, leaving them financially struggling amid the unwinding. They're providing care without pay, and sometimes going into debt. It's affecting small long-term care facilities, substance use disorder clinics, and federally funded health centers that rely on Medicaid to offer treatment based on need, not what people can pay.
State health officials have defended their Medicaid redetermination process and said they have worked to address public assistance backlogs.
Financial pinches were expected as people who legitimately no longer qualify were removed from coverage. But the businesses have said an overburdened state workforce is creating a different set of problems. In some cases, it has taken months for people to reapply for Medicaid after getting dropped, or to access the coverage for the first time. Part of the problem, providers said, are long waits on hold for the state's call center and limited in-person help.
The problem is ongoing: George said two Guardian residents were booted from Medicaid in mid-March, with the state citing a lack of information as the cause.
"I have proof we submitted the needed information weeks ago," he said.
Providers said they've also experienced cases of inconsistent Medicaid payments for people who haven't lost coverage. It can be hard to disentangle why payments suddenly stop. Patients and providers are working within the same overstretched system.
"Some have honestly had to stop seeing Medicaid patients so that they can meet their needs and keep the lights on," Forte said. "It is just adding to the access crisis we have in the state."
Payment shortfalls especially hurt clinics that base fees on patient income.
In
Ebelt didn't acknowledge broader Medicaid payment delays, but instead said a provider may be submitting claims for Medicaid enrollees who aren't eligible. He rejected the idea that individual examples of disruptions amount to a systemic problem.
"We would caution you against using broad brush strokes to paint a picture of our overall eligibility system and processes based on a handful of anecdotal stories," Ebelt said in an emailed response to a
Ebelt didn't directly answer questions about continued long waits for people seeking help but instead said continued coverage depends on individual beneficiaries submitting information on time.
Federal data shows
When they do get through to the state's call center, the person on the other end can't always resolve their issue or will answer questions for only one case at a time.
"You don't know how long it's going to take — it could be two months, it could be six months — and there's nobody to talk to," White said.
Ebelt said long-term care facilities were provided information on how to prepare for the unwinding process. He said new Medicaid cases for long-term care facilities are complicated and can take time.
He said that since last fall the state hasn't consistently mailed him routine paperwork he needs to fill out and return in exchange for Medicaid payments to continue. He tried the state's call center, he said, but each time he waited on hold for more than two hours. He made four two-hour round trips to his closest office of public assistance to try to get answers.
Sometimes the workers told him that there was a state error, he said, and other times that he was missing paperwork he'd already submitted, such as where money from selling his mom's car went.
"Each time I went, they gave me a different answer as to why my mother's bills weren't being paid," Klaumann said.
Across the nation, people have reported system errors and outdated contact information that led states to drop people who qualify. At least 28 states paused procedural disenrollments to boost outreach to people who qualify, according to federal data.
Ferguson said he's writing grant proposals to continue to treat people despite their inability to pay.
"We're riding by the seat of our pants right now," he said. "We are unsure what next month or the next quarter looks like."
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