By: Drew Hawkins, Gulf
States Newsroom, KFF Health News
For Roderick Givens, a radiation oncologist, the expansion of Medicaid
isn’t just a policy issue. He practices medicine in a rural area in the
Mississippi Delta and he sees daily how Medicaid coverage could help his
uninsured patients.
“I can’t tell you the number of patients who I see who come in with
advanced disease, who have full-time jobs,” Givens said. “They haven’t
seen a physician in years. They can’t afford it. They don’t have
coverage.”
This spring, the Mississippi Legislature considered but
ultimately failed to expand Medicaid, which would have extended coverage
to around 200,000 low-income residents. Mississippi is one of 10 states
that haven’t expanded Medicaid, the state and federal health insurance
program for people with low incomes or disabilities.
Seven of those states are in the South. But as more conservative-leaning
states like North Carolina adopt it, the drumbeat of support, as one
Southern state lawmaker put it, grows louder.
Advocates for expanding Medicaid say opposition is largely being driven by
political polarization, rather than cost concerns.
Givens, who is also chair of the board of trustees for the Mississippi
State Medical Association, which supports Medicaid expansion, said the
federal government would pay for the vast majority of it and that most
Mississippians support it. “Why does that not translate when it comes to
policy?” Givens asked. “It’s called the stupidity of politics. Period.”
Givens pointed to Arkansas as a potential model for Mississippi because
the state has similar demographics and expansion has been in place there
for a decade. “Look at what has worked for them and what needs to be
tweaked,” he said. “For me, that’s just common sense.”
In states that have not expanded Medicaid, hundreds of thousands of people
fall into the “coverage gap,” meaning they earn too much to qualify for
Medicaid but are not eligible for subsidies to help pay for private
insurance. Those in the coverage gap also can’t afford premiums and other
out-of-pocket expenses on employer-sponsored insurance even if they are
eligible.
The coverage gap is not an issue in states that have expanded Medicaid. In
those states, a single person making up to 138% of the poverty level, or
about $20,000 a year, can get on Medicaid. Someone making more than that
can get subsidies for private health insurance.
For the first time in Mississippi, both the state Senate and House of
Representatives proposed expanding Medicaid during the legislative session
that ended in May. In the end, the efforts fizzled at the last minute.
Had the proposed bills succeeded, some 74,000 Mississippians who are stuck
in the coverage gap would have gained access to Medicaid.
The House speaker, Jason White, a Republican who supports expansion,
acknowledged the political hurdles. “It’s President Obama’s signature
piece of legislation. It’s known as Obamacare,” White said. “So, there are
a lot of political dynamics centered around it that probably never allowed
it to get off the ground.”
White said this year was different because of increased support from the
business community.
“I kidded some of my fellow Republicans. I said, ‘Come for the savings, if
you will, and then you can stay for the salvation and the good things that
it does to improve people’s lives,’” White said. “If you can’t get there
because it’s the right or compassionate thing to do to help these
individuals, get there because it makes sense from a business standpoint.”
In neighboring Alabama, politics also thwarted attempts to provide more
health care this year. Although the state legislature didn’t vote on any
direct expansion bills, there was an attempt to include expansion language
in a bill about casino gambling — specifically, a provision to allocate
some gambling profits to rural health systems.
Ultimately, the Alabama bill was stripped down, and the funding for rural
health was removed.
If Alabama expanded Medicaid, at least 174,000 more people would be
covered, according to KFF. But the connection to Obamacare remains a
stumbling block in Alabama’s Republican-dominated state legislature.
“Just the partisan nature of this is definitely a problem,” said Regina
Wagner, an assistant professor of political science at the University of
Alabama. Wagner said that most Alabama voters support expansion and that
other states have adopted the programs after mounting public pressure.
“A lot of rural voters are Republicans. And so your own constituents are
being hit by this and you’re not addressing it,” she said. “If the
pressure gets high enough and sentiment shifts, maybe that’s going to be
enough to push them.”
The main disagreement in the Mississippi Legislature revolved around work
requirements — recipients would have to show they were working part-time
or in school.
White said many of his Republican colleagues view extending health
coverage through Medicaid as “some form of welfare, some form of giveaway,
some form of expanding government.”
Opponents of Medicaid expansion in Alabama are also concerned about
potential impacts on the workforce of what they call free health care.
“If you open up this federal subsidized program for hundreds of thousands
of people, then it could actually hurt that labor participation rate, give
them another reason not to go to work, to stay at home,” said Justin
Bogie, senior director of fiscal policy at the Alabama Policy Institute, a
research group that says it is committed to limited government.
The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, would
have to issue a waiver to allow an expansion plan with a work requirement
— something the Biden administration hasn’t done for any state.
This spring, Mississippi came close to a compromise bill that included a
work requirement, something that needs a CMS waiver. Had the bill passed
and CMS denied the waiver, expansion still would not have taken effect,
and the state would have had to apply for the waiver from CMS every year,
hoping for approval under a future — potentially more conservative —
presidential administration.
That’s what happened in Georgia. In 2020, the Trump administration
approved a waiver for a work requirement as part of a limited expansion
effort. CMS later rescinded the waiver under the Biden administration,
leading to a lawsuit. A federal judge ruled in favor of Georgia,
reinstating the work requirement provisions.
However, only about 2,300 people are enrolled — which is fewer than half
of 1% of the more than 430,000 uninsured Georgia adults who could gain
access if Medicaid were fully expanded, according to KFF. The state’s
alternative expansion plan has cost taxpayers at least $26 million,
according to KFF, with nearly all of it going to administrative and
consulting fees, not medical care for low-income residents.
As public support for expansion continues to grow in holdout states, North
Carolina, the most recent Southern state to pass Medicaid expansion, may
offer a glimpse of the future. Since its adoption last year, more than
600,000 people have become eligible.
“But it still took a long time,” said Robin Rudowitz, a vice president and
director of the Program on Medicaid and the Uninsured at KFF, a health
information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News. “It took the governor
who continually supported expansion, and the legislature finally came to
endorse and pass the expansion.”
Rudowitz said the fiscal incentive under the American Rescue Plan Act
played a role in moving the needle in North Carolina and could help ignite
debate in other holdout states. But ultimately, she said, the reasons the
Affordable Care Act was established continue to be the strongest
motivators.
“Without expansion, there are more people who are uninsured. Hospitals and
other providers are not able to get reimbursement because individuals are
uninsured,” Rudowitz said. “Those are the underlying issues that existed
pre-ACA and continue to exist, particularly in states that haven’t adopted
expansion.”
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This article is from a partnership that includes the Gulf States
Newsroom , NPR , and KFF Health News.
©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.