High Medicaid population say reports record low access
Its becoming more difficult for Texas Medicaid patients to find a doctor. A survey released July 9 by the Texas Medical Assn. reported that regulatory burdens and other administrative hassles are forcing doctors to reduce the number of patients on government health care programs whom they will accept.
This is not about doctors wanting to abandon Medicaid patients, TMA President Michael E. Speer, MD, said. He stated Medicare and Medicaid have more and more paper work and more and more rules, which results in less time to see patients.
Medicaid patient access is the hardest hit, the survey found. The portion of Texas doctors available to treat new Medicaid patients has dropped from 42% in 2010 to 31% this year, an all-time low, according to the survey. The Medicaid program in Texas covers 3.4 million people.
Cuts to Medicaid payment rates of 2% in 2010 and 2011 have made it difficult for doctors to practice, as payments now cover less than half of the average cost to practices of providing the services, Dr. Speer said. At the beginning of 2012, pay for doctors to treat Medicare-Medicaid dual-eligible patients was cut an additional 20%. Every business has a breaking point; physicians practices are no different, he said.
The TMA in its survey detailed various experiences from individual doctors who had to limit access to Medicare and Medicaid patients. Thomas J. Parr, MD, an orthopedic surgeon in Sugar Land, Texas, had to make a financial decision several years ago to stop accepting Medicaid patients, stated his wife, Joannie Parr, an accountant who manages her husbands medical practice. Medicaid puts up so many hurdles, we found it was easier to provide free care outright than hassle with Medicaids bureaucracy for basically no pay, she said.
Dr. Parr treats low-income patients referred to him by a free clinic and volunteers his surgical services at a local hospital, the survey noted.
The situation with Medicare isnt much better, the TMA indicated. Doctors have answered the government mandate to invest in costly health information technology, upgraded their coding and billing systems, implemented [electronic prescribing] programs, withstood the threat of a new 60,000-item medical coding system (ICD-10), and for the past decade endured the payment uncertainty of Medicare, Dr. Speer stated in a statement.
The portion of Texas doctors accepting all new Medicare patients declined from 66% in 2010 to 58% in 2012, according to the survey. The portion of doctors limiting how many new Medicare patients they accept and those declining all new Medicare patients each rose by 4% in the past year.
These are the lowest-ever new-patient acceptance rates the association has seen, Dr. Speer said.
Citing the continuing burden of Medicaid on the say budget, Texas Gov. Rick Perry joined at least a half-dozen other Republican governors who stated they would opt out of expanding Medicaid enrollment in 2014, following the U.S. Supreme Courts ruling on the Affordable Care Act. The ruling effectively made this provision of the law optional for states.
In a statement on the courts decision, Texas Health and Human Services Executive Commissioner Tom Suehs indicated that say officials wanted to work with the Legislature to try to improve care and lower costs for the Medicaid program. Reforms made possible through a new program waiver will replace an archaic federal Medicaid funding system with one built around local solutions that rewards hospitals for patient care and innovation. This will lay the foundation for true Medicaid reform in Texas and grant us to use existing funding to improve access to care, Suehs said.
To Dr. Speer, reform means removing the roadblocks to care. I dont know if youve ever seen an application form for Medicaid. I think about myself to be pretty well-educated, and I could not fill it out without help. This exemplifies just one of the barriers to obtaining Medicaid, he said. Physicians would like to take care of the patient, but the patient has got to be able to get to us.
Copyright 2012 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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Submited at Thursday, July 19th, 2012 at 4:15 pm on Uncategorized by chuck
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