With Medicaid Cuts, Doctors and Patients Drop Out
Published: March 15, 2010, New York Times
Carol Y. Vliet began chemotherapy to treat her cancer, but lost
her doctor because he stopped seeing Medicaid patients.
As she began a punishing regimen of chemotherapy
and radiation, Mrs. Vliet found a measure of comfort in her monthly appointments
with her primary care physician, Dr. Saed J. Sahouri, who had been monitoring
her health for nearly two years.
She was devastated, therefore, when Dr. Sahouri informed her a few months
later that he could no longer see her because, like a growing number of doctors,
he had stopped taking patients with Medicaid.
Dr. Sahouri said that his reimbursements from Medicaid were so low — often no
more than $25 per office visit — that he was losing money every time a patient
walked in his exam room.
The final insult, he said, came when Michigan cut those payments by 8 percent
last year to help close a gaping budget shortfall.
gMy office manager was telling me to do this for a long time, and I
resisted,h Dr. Sahouri said. gBut after a while you realize that wefre really
losing money on seeing those patients, not even breaking even. We were starting
to lose more and more money, month after month.h
It has not taken long for communities like Flint to feel the downstream
effects of a nationwide torrent of
state cuts to Medicaid, the government insurance program for the poor and
disabled. With states squeezing payments to providers even as the economy fuels
explosive growth in enrollment, patients are finding it increasingly difficult
to locate doctors and dentists who will accept their coverage. Inevitably, many
defer care or wind up in hospital emergency rooms, which are required to take
anyone in an urgent condition.
Mrs. Vliet, 53, who lives just outside Flint, has yet to find a replacement
for Dr. Sahouri. gWhen you build a relationship, you want to stay with that
doctor,h she said recently, her face gaunt from disease, and her head wrapped in
a floral bandanna. gYou donft want to go from doctor to doctor to doctor and
have strangers looking at you that donft have a clue who you are.h
The inadequacy of Medicaid payments is severe enough that it has become a
rare point of agreement in the health care debate between President
Obama and Congressional Republicans. In a letter
to Congress after their February health care meeting, Mr. Obama wrote that
rates might need to rise if Democrats achieved their goal of extending Medicaid
eligibility to 15 million uninsured Americans.
In 2008, Medicaid reimbursements averaged only 72 percent of the rates paid
by Medicare,
which are themselves typically well below those of commercial insurers, according to the Urban
Institute, a research group. At 63 percent, Michigan had the sixth-lowest
rate in the country, even before the recent cuts.
In Flint, Dr. Nita M. Kulkarni, an obstetrician, receives $29.42 from
Medicaid for a visit that would bill $69.63 from Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Michigan. She receives $842.16 from Medicaid for a Caesarean delivery, compared
with $1,393.31 from Blue Cross.
If she takes too many Medicaid patients, she said, she cannot afford overhead
expenses like staff salaries, the office mortgage and malpractice insurance that
will run $42,800 this year. She also said she feared being sued by Medicaid
patients because they might be at higher risk for problem pregnancies, because
of underlying health problems.
As a result, she takes new Medicaid patients only if they are relatives or
friends of existing patients. But her guilt is assuaged somewhat, she said,
because her husband, who is also her office mate, Dr. Bobby B. Mukkamala, an
ear, nose and throat specialist, is able to take Medicaid. She said he is able
to do so because only a modest share of his patients have it.
The states and the federal government share the cost of Medicaid, which saw a
record enrollment increase of 3.3 million people last year. The program now
benefits 47 million people, primarily children, pregnant women, disabled adults
and nursing home residents. It falls to the states to control spending by
setting limits on eligibility, benefits and provider payments within broad
federal guidelines.
Michigan, like many other states, did just that last year, packaging the 8
percent reimbursement cut with the elimination of dental, vision, podiatry,
hearing and chiropractic services for adults.
When Randy C. Smith showed up recently at a Hamilton Community Health Network
clinic near Flint, complaining of a throbbing molar, Dr. Miriam L. Parker had to
inform him that Medicaid no longer covered the root canal and crown he needed.
A landscaper who has been without work for 15 months, Mr. Smith, 46, said he
could not afford the $2,000 cost. gI guess Ifll just take Tylenol or Motrin,h he
said before leaving.
This year, Gov. Jennifer
M. Granholm, a Democrat, has revived a proposal to impose a 3 percent tax on
physician revenues. Without the tax, she has warned, the state may have to
reduce payments to health care providers by 11 percent.
In Flint, the birthplace of General
Motors, the collapse of automobile manufacturing has melded with the recession
to drive unemployment to a staggering 27 percent. About one in four non-elderly
residents
of Genesee County are uninsured, and one in five depends on Medicaid. The
countyfs Medicaid rolls have grown by 37 percent since 2001, and the program now
pays for half of all childbirths.
But surveys show the share of doctors accepting new Medicaid patients is
declining. Waits for an appointment at the cityfs federally subsidized health
clinic, where most patients have Medicaid, have lengthened to four months from
six weeks in 2008. Parents like Rebecca and Jeoffrey Curtis, who had brought
their 2-year-old son, Brian, to the clinic, say they have struggled to find a
pediatrician.
gI called four or five doctors and asked if they accepted our Medicaid plan,h
said Ms. Curtis, a 21-year-old waitress. gIt would always be, eNo, Ifm sorry.f
It kind of makes us feel like second-class citizens.h
As physicians limit their Medicaid practices, emergency rooms are seeing more
patients who do not need acute care.
At Genesys Regional Medical Center, one of three area hospitals,
Medicaid volume is up 14 percent over last year. At Hurley Medical Center, the
cityfs safety net hospital, Dr. Michael Jaggi detects the difference when
advising emergency room patients to seek follow-up treatment.
gWe get met with the blank stare of eWhere do I go from here?f h said
Dr. Jaggi, the chief of emergency medicine.
New doctors, with their mountains of medical school debt, are fleeing the
state because of payment cuts and proposed taxes. Dr. Kiet A. Doan, a surgeon in
Flint, said that of 72 residents he had trained at local hospitals only two had
stayed in the area, and both are natives.
Access to care can be even more challenging in remote parts of the state. The
MidMichigan Medical Center in Clare, about 90 miles northwest of Flint, closed
its obstetrics unit last year because Medicaid reimbursements covered only 65
percent of actual costs. Two other hospitals in the region might follow suit,
potentially leaving 16 contiguous counties without obstetrics.
Medicaid enrollees in Michiganfs midsection have grown accustomed to long
journeys for care. This month, Shannon M. Brown of Winn skipped work to drive
her 8-year-old son more than two hours for a five-minute consultation with Dr.
Mukkamala. Her pediatrician could not find a specialist any closer who would
take Medicaid, she said.
Later this month, she will take the predawn drive again so Dr. Mukkamala can
remove her sonfs tonsils and adenoids.
gHefs going to have to sit in the car for three hours after his surgery,h Mrs.
Brown said. gIfm not looking forward to that one.h