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Governors Resist Bush Plan to Slow Costs
of Medicaid
WASHINGTON, May 24, 2004 — After two months
of intense secret negotiations, governors and Bush administration officials have
been unable to agree on a plan to rein in the soaring cost of Medicaid,
participants in the talks say.
Governors of both parties are resisting a
proposal offered by President Bush this year to set firm limits on federal
Medicaid spending in each state over the next decade.
"I am extremely wary of that approach,"
said Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, a Democrat on the bipartisan team of 10
governors negotiating with the Bush administration.
Negotiators emphasized that it was not just
Democrats resisting Mr. Bush's proposal to give each state a fixed allotment of
federal money to cover all Medicaid costs in each of the next 10 years.
Republican governors, including Jeb Bush of
Florida and John G. Rowland of Connecticut, have also expressed reservations,
the negotiators said. The negotiations have been conducted privately, but
details of the talks were obtained in interviews and from documents exchanged by
the negotiators.
The basic concern, set forth in documents
from the National Governors Association, is that the president's proposal does
not protect states against unforeseen costs that might result from changes in
the economy, natural disasters, outbreaks of disease or the development of
expensive drugs and other treatments.
Dr. Rhonda M. Medows, secretary of the
Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, said Governor Bush was "right
there with the other governors" on this issue.
"Governor Bush is not going to make a
decision without knowing there's a safety net to address the possibility of a
phenomenal or catastrophic event, like a new disease or a man-made or natural
disaster," Dr. Medows said. "He's a responsible man. He doesn't want to take
money up front and dump problems on his successor."
State officials recalled the experience of
New York, which added more than 300,000 people to its Medicaid rolls in four
months after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Some of the 10 governors have come under
pressure from advocates for the disabled, hospitals and other health care
providers lobbying against any caps on federal Medicaid spending.
The American Hospital Association and the
American Academy of Pediatrics have sent letters opposing the president's plan.
Federal officials have been trying to
explain the president's proposal to governors since late January.
But Thomas A. Scully, administrator of the
federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said he found "a surprising
level of misunderstanding" when he met with the governors on May 14. The Bush
administration had wanted an agreement by May 15.
The governors association tries to work by
consensus and would adopt a new policy on Medicaid only if two-thirds of the
governors endorsed it. Negotiations continue, governors said, because they see
Medicaid costs as growing out of control and they desperately want more
authority to manage the program.
The governors readily embraced Mr. Bush's
proposal to give states power to alter Medicaid benefits, modify eligibility
rules and charge higher co-payments.
But the governors said they had reached no
consensus, among themselves or with the administration, on the financing of the
program, which provides health insurance to 50 million low-income people.
The negotiations are immensely important.
Medicaid, the nation's largest health insurance program, pays for one-third of
all births, covers one-fourth of all children and finances care for two-thirds
of nursing home residents. It is also the fastest-growing item in most state
budgets, rising 13 percent last year, even though state revenues were virtually
flat.
Medicaid is expected to cost $277 billion
this year, of which $158 billion is the federal share and $119 billion comes
from the states. The federal share of Medicaid spending varies with a state's
per capita income, ranging from a high of 77 percent in Mississippi to a low of
50 percent in 12 states, including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
Having rejected elements of President
Bush's proposal, the governors are trying to devise an alternative that would
make federal costs more predictable while still allowing Medicaid to respond to
economic fluctuations and other unforeseen events.
One option being considered by the
governors is simply to recalculate the federal allotments every year or two.
Each state taking this option would receive a lump sum of federal money, but the
amount could be adjusted if, for example, Medicaid costs increased because of a
recession, a bioterrorist attack or the discovery of new medicines to treat AIDS
or Alzheimer's disease.
Another option would continue the current
open-ended commitment of federal money to some of the most vulnerable Medicaid
recipients, including poor children whom states are now required to cover. But
under this proposal, the federal government would set a cap on its spending for
other groups that now account for one-third of all Medicaid recipients.
This hybrid approach, combining Medicaid's
current payment formula with a fixed allotment of federal money for some costs,
"has gained quite a bit of support among governors" on the negotiating team, Dr.
Medows said.
Gov. Paul E. Patton of Kentucky, a Democrat
who is chairman of the National Governors Association, has floated a version of
the proposal, under which states would accept more financial risk in return for
greater freedom to manage the program.
Medicaid benefits are now generally all or
nothing. Eligibility standards vary widely from state to state, but states have
to cover children under the age of 6 whose families have incomes up to 133
percent of the poverty level. People who qualify for Medicaid usually have
access to a package of benefits more extensive than those available in
commercial health insurance.
Some governors would offer different
Medicaid benefits to different population groups: less generous benefits to
children of higher-income families, for example, or a handful of specific drugs
for people with the virus that causes AIDS.
Advocates for children and the disabled
fear they could lose access to critical services as a result of such changes.
Governors said their top priority was to
get the federal government to pay the full cost of providing care to six million
low-income elderly people who qualify for both Medicaid and Medicare.
Bush administration officials said this
issue should be addressed separately, in discussions to revamp Medicare. That
answer does not satisfy the governors, who see health care for the elderly as a
federal obligation. Medicaid provides more extensive benefits than Medicare, a
program financed entirely with federal money.
People who qualify for both programs
account for 12 percent of Medicaid recipients, but more than 30 percent of state
Medicaid spending, including $7 billion a year for prescription drugs and $24
billion a year for nursing homes and other long-term care. If Congress adds
outpatient drug benefits to Medicare, the federal government would pick up those
pharmaceutical costs. But, governors said, they would still be left with their
share of the costs for long-term care.
House Republicans said they would soon
begin drafting legislation to overhaul Medicaid. Representatives Heather A.
Wilson of New Mexico and Billy Tauzin of Louisiana, the chairman of the Energy
and Committee Committee, will lead the effort. Ms. Wilson said Congress would
consider the administration's proposal and the governors' ideas.
But Mr. Scully, the top federal Medicaid
official, said: "It will be hard for Congress to pass any legislation unless it
has strong bipartisan support from governors. They need to come to an agreement
very soon, or they'll lose this opportunity." |