Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Grim Numbers Result from Failure to Expand Medicaid

In the aftermath of the decisions by state governors and legislators not to expand Medicaid, the grim numbers are beginning to roll in.  Failure to expand Medicaid will cost states more than 19,000 lives and over a billion dollars per year.

And that, sadly, is only the beginning.
Source: RAND Analysis, Health Affairs, June 2013


I wrote about this prospect earlier this year, when I concluded that as many as 36,000 lives could hang in the balance of the Medicaid expansion debate.

Now we have some new numbers from a RAND Corporation analysis, published this month by Health Affairs, which quantified the impact of failing to expand Medicaid in fourteen states (as of April 2013) where governors opposed the expansion.  The fourteen states were Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin.

It found that in 2016 there would be 3.6 million fewer insured people in these states.  Collectively, the states would lose $8.4 billion annually in federal reimbursement.  And they would also need to spend an additional $1 billion annually on uncompensated care as a result of their short-sighted decision.

In addition – and most chillingly – there would be 19,000 additional deaths in those states each year.  This is two and a half times the number of total combined combat deaths by coalition troops since the beginning of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and more than the total number of homicide deaths in the nation each year.

But these numbers are already out of date, overshadowed by legislative decisions of the last month.

After the analysis was completed, several more states have moved to reject expansion.  Florida adjourned its legislative session in early May without agreeing to the expansion.  Nebraska’s expansion bill died in mid-May.  As recently as two weeks ago, Michigan’s Republican governor was calling for federal help to try to convince legislators in that state to put Medicaid expansion back into the budget.  And both the Ohioand New Hampshire Senates rejected Medicaid expansion just last week.

These decisions will cost hundreds of millions more dollars, while adding millions to the number of uninsured.  Florida’s rejection alone will account for one million more uninsured people and cost state taxpayers at least $430 million.

Failure to expand Medicaid in these states and others will also add thousands more deaths to the tally.

The irony is that all of these states have strong pro-life constituencies.  But the moral imperative of protecting lives doesn’t always extend to those who are already among the living – especially when it is the Affordable Care Act that offers the protection.

The people who will die prematurely as a result of decisions not to expand Medicaid include children with special health care needs – think of children who await organ transplants as examples – and adults with chronic diseases.  These people survive under the most challenging of physical and mental conditions, and have done nothing to incur the wrath of political leaders. 

And yet there is an undercurrent of anger toward those who are acting to save these lives that is, frankly, chilling.

Here is what the Republican Party of Benton County, Arkansas, published in its April 2013 newsletter directed at Republican legislators who supported the Medicaid expansion in that state:

“The 2nd Amendment means nothing unless those in power believe you would have no problem simply walking up and shooting them if they got too far out of line and stopped responding as representatives.  It seems that we are unable to muster that belief in any of our representatives on a state or federal level.

“But we have to have something, something costly, something that they will fear and that we will use if they step out of line.  If we can’t shoot them, we have to at least be firm in our threat to take immediate action against them politically, socially, or civically if they screw up on something this big.  Personally, I think a gun is quicker and more merciful, but hey, we can’t.”

So we should think about shooting Republicans who vote for Medicaid expansion? 

Could the opposition to Medicaid expansion be more absurd and less grounded in reality? 

I suppose it could, if it involves giving up billions in federal dollars, costing state taxpayers billions more, throwing millions onto hospitals’ charity care rolls, and costing thousands their lives.

Come hear Paul Gionfriddo speak about what comes next for the health and mental health of South Floridians now that the legislature failed to expand Medicaid.  Sponsored by the Mental Health Association of Palm Beach County, and open to the public.  On Thursday, June 20, at noon at 909 Fern Street, West Palm Beach.  To Register: http://www.mhapbc.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=events.details&content_id=132


Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.  Twitter: @pgionfriddo.  Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo.  LinkedIn:  www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/ 

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