Ken
Carlson
January 30, 2003
Stanislaus County officials concerned about Gov. Davis' proposed cuts
to Med-Cal say they are encouraged that state lawmakers are resisting
the plan.
Monday, the Assembly Budget Committee rejected the proposals, and last
week the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee decided to remove all
cuts to the Medi-Cal program from the table.
"At least at first blush, these proposals are being rejected by
the state Legislature," said Margaret Szczepaniak, managing director
of the county Health Services Agency. "But the fight is far from
over."
The governor has proposed a number of cuts to the state's health program
for the poor, including:
- A 15 percent decrease in reimbursements to physicians who treat Medi-Cal
patients.
- Lower income eligibility levels for the program.
- Cuts to benefits such as dental services, medical supplies, podiatry,
hospice, vision care and physical therapy.
Nursing homes also would face a cut in reimbursements that could drive
some out business, analysts said.
Davis also has proposed shifting responsibility for many programs to
counties.
Stanislaus County, which operates public health clinics, would lose an
estimated $1.5 million to $2 million a year if provider rates were cut.
And it's unclear how the county would make up the losses.
Local officials also worry that people would have to verify their income
and other information four times a year to stay on Medi-Cal.
State health officials estimate that the hassle of quarterly reporting
alone would cause 193,000 people to lose eligibility. County officials
predict chaos.
"What you would have is thousands of people without health insurance,
looking for a physician who would take them without health insurance,
or they would show up in emergency rooms for care," Szczepaniak said.
"There is also a chance that providers in the community are no longer
going to be willing to accept Medi-Cal at a 15 percent decrease."
Kathy Harwell, a program manager for the Community Services Agency, said
the agency would handle the quarterly reporting mostly through the mail.
She said the agency would send the forms to clients; she's unsure how
many would fill out the documents and mail them back.
The governor also has proposed pushing onto the counties the responsibility
for long-term care for the elderly and disabled.
State money would be available to help the counties. But county officials
said they know little about the needs of the elderly and the costs of
caring for them.
"Our elderly population is growing," Harwell noted.
Some think the proposals would create such an upheaval that the Legislature
will never approve them. But some local health officials are predicting
months of uncertainty about what's going to happen.
"I am concerned that with the stalemate in Sacramento, they won't
be doing anything, that we won't have a state budget in time," Szczepaniak
said. "It's very difficult to plan in this atmosphere."
Bee staff writer Ken Carlson can be reached
at 578-2321 or kcarlson@modbee.com.
Reprinted by permission of Modesto Bee.
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