Bill to end Medicaid managed care advances in House
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[January 12, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A House committee on Monday
advanced a bill that would end the system of hiring private insurance
companies to manage the state’s Medicaid program at the end of their
current contracts and replace it with a standard fee-for-service payment
system.
The bill also calls for a three-year moratorium on any hospital closures
or downsizing.
However, it is expected that further amendments to the bill are being
drafted, and it was unclear Monday whether a final version could be
approved by both chambers of the General Assembly before the special
lame duck session ends, either Tuesday or early Wednesday.
That proposal is part of a health care reform package being pushed by
the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, an agenda aimed at addressing
racial and ethnic disparities in the state’s health care system.
Medicaid covers more than 3 million people in Illinois, according to the
latest tally by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, and
the majority of them are enrolled in a managed care program. Nearly half
of those enrollees, more than 1.4 million, are children in low-income
families. Another 1.1 million are working-age adults, including more
than 640,000 who became eligible with the federal expansion of Medicaid
under the Affordable Care Act.
The idea behind managed care was to reduce costs and improve health
outcomes by coordinating each person’s health care – making sure they
get regular checkups and follow-up visits and coordinating services
between primary care providers and specialists.
But critics of the program have long argued that the insurance
companies, known as managed care organizations, or MCOs, don’t really
save money by reducing costs but, rather, by denying claims.
“The MCOs are really managed claims organizations not managed care
organizations,” Tim Egan, president and CEO of Roseland Community
Hospital in Chicago, said during a House Executive Committee hearing.
“They deny health care claims and make money off the backs of Medicaid
providers in Illinois, which is just outright wrong.”
The bill, introduced as an amendment to Senate Bill 558, is sponsored by
Rep. Camille Lilly, D-Chicago, a member of the ILBC.
“One of the things that I want to make sure I have the opportunity to
ask the MCO organizations is, why do they think providers have signs
outside of their facilities that say we accept most MCO plans and not
all,” Lilly said during the hearing. “And once that sign is displayed in
the poor, the Black and brown community, which that's where those signs
are, that means those individuals do not have access to health care
within their community.”
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State Rep. Camille Lilly, D-Chicago, urges passage of
a bill that would end the state’s privatized “managed care” system
in Medicaid during a committee hearing in the Bank of Springfield
Center on Monday. (Credit: blueroomstream.com)
Samantha Olds Frey, CEO of the Illinois Association of Medicaid
Health Plans, which represents MCOs, acknowledged that work needs to
be done to address racial disparities in health care, but she said
ending managed care itself would be disruptive and could result in a
loss of some federal funding.
That’s because the state currently levies an assessment on MCOs,
which generates money that is then used to draw down additional
federal dollars that are used to support reimbursement rates and
help fund safety net hospitals.
“As drafted, we believe this will jeopardize billions of dollars in
federal revenue, that it will destabilize the program and cause
confusion during an already very confusing time for Medicaid
members,” she said. “And that'll eliminate the stable partnership
that the health plans have been able to offer to the state
throughout financial crises and that we continue to offer to the
state.”
David Gross, a senior vice president of the Illinois Health and
Hospital Association, also spoke about the potential loss of federal
dollars by ending managed care.
“There's over $3 billion that flows through the assessment program
right now through the MCOs to our hospitals, including $1.4 billion
over the next two years for our safety net hospitals, who I think,
as everyone knows here, face very difficult financial challenges,
and many times have only a few days of cash on hand,” he said.
Gross also spoke against a provision of the bill calling for a
three-year moratorium on hospital closures and capacity reductions.
“Hospitals need financial resources,” he said. “They need
appropriate staffing and they need patient volume to maintain
service lines in order to move forward with a functioning hospital.
And forcing the hospital to stay open when they cannot afford to do
so, and do not have the appropriate staff or the patient volume to
maintain competencies, puts the safety of patients at risk.”
The committee voted 8-5 to advance the bill to the full House.
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