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Struggling States Cut Healthcare for Poor Before Obama Can Bolster Coverage

by: Noam N. Levey  |  The Los Angeles Times

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A woman receives chemotherapy for breast cancer. States are slashing health services to their poorest residents amid the economic downturn. (Photo: Owen Franken / Corbis)

    The unprecedented reductions come as millions are losing their jobs and insurance. They are so steep that the federal rescue package may not be able to revive them.

    Washington - Even as President-elect Barack Obama plans an ambitious push to expand health coverage nationwide, states are slashing health services to their poorest residents amid the economic downturn.

    The unprecedented cuts in public assistance come as millions of Americans are losing their jobs and health insurance.

    In many cases, the cuts are so deep that even the massive federal rescue package being assembled on Capitol Hill may not be enough to restore services being eliminated in the burgeoning crisis, health officials warn.

    And the faltering economy has all but killed trailblazing state campaigns to expand coverage for the working poor - once seen as hopeful signs for national health care reform.

    Illinois' senior citizens are facing the traumatic prospect of being moved from nursing homes teetering on the edge of bankruptcy as the homes wait for months to be paid by the floundering state government.

    South Carolina has cut treatment for low-income women under 40 with breast or cervical cancer and stopped providing nutritional supplements for people with kidney failure.

    In southern Nevada, cancer patients without health coverage no longer have a place to get chemotherapy after the state's largest public hospital stopped providing outpatient oncology services.

    "This is exactly the time when we should be beefing up services," said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, a leading consumer advocacy group. "Instead, we are unraveling the safety net to the point where it may not be possible to stitch it back together again."

    Congressional Democrats hope to begin offering some help today, as the House takes up legislation to expand the popular State Children's Health Insurance Program, a top priority of the incoming administration.

    The expansion, which could extend coverage to an additional 4 million low-income children, was vetoed twice by President Bush in 2007, but is expected to easily win approval now.

    Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are also at work on a stimulus package that could include as much as $100 billion to bail out Medicaid, the primary federally funded health program for the poor administered by the states.

    That aid package is expected to require states to maintain some of the medical services currently on the chopping block, though it may come too late to reverse many cuts already made.

    Lawmakers plan additional assistance to help Americans keep their health insurance if they lose their jobs.

    But even some congressional leaders concede the help will be insufficient. "Let's be honest," said Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), a close Obama ally. "We won't be able to save every soul here."

    At least 44 states are facing budget shortfalls over the next two years totaling more than $350 billion, according to a recent survey by the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal Washington-based think tank.

    Unable to run deficits like the federal government, states have been scrambling for months to cut aid to schools, universities and, increasingly, residents who rely on the state for medical care.

    Nationwide, roughly 60 million low-income people -- half of them children -- use the Medicaid program to get some form of healthcare, including basic physician services, prescription drugs, X-rays, dental care and even hospice care.

    Some of those services are now in jeopardy.

    Florida is poised to cut its home services for poor senior citizens, such as bathing and meal preparation, as nearly 19,000 seniors in the state are on a waiting list to get the care rather than be sent to nursing homes.

    Utah lawmakers are looking at cutting public health programs and eliminating coverage for about 20,000 low-income people who rely on the state-funded Utah Primary Care Network.

    "The scale of this is unprecedented," said AARP Vice President Elaine Ryan, who has spent nearly three decades working on health policy at the state and federal level. "I really have never seen anything like this."

    Some states have tried to avoid cuts in services by delaying or reducing payments to doctors and other medical providers who treat low-income patients.

    This is taking a toll, however, as a growing number of providers stop treating those with state-funded insurance.

    Nevada's largest county closed its outpatient oncology clinic last year, citing decreases in Medicaid funding for treating low-income cancer patients.

    Now, advocates in Las Vegas are having to counsel patients to look at getting care by moving to other states where they have relatives.

    "We're essentially creating medical refugees," said Stacey Gross, community programs manager at Susan G. Komen for the Cure of Southern Nevada.

    Melvin Siegel, who operates five nursing homes serving some 400 seniors around Springfield, Ill., said he is close to closing because of slow payments from the state.

    Nursing homes, which rely heavily on Medicaid, often don't have the option of rejecting patients on public assistance.

    "There is no place to go," said Siegel, 79, who said he has borrowed against his home, life insurance and retirement savings to keep in business. "If this falls apart, I'll be penniless. . . . It's never been this bad."

  

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I'd like to know why the

I'd like to know why the Federal Government is fast acting to bail out private Corporations and so indifferent to States' desperate needs?

Isn't it interesting that

Isn't it interesting that none of the conversation about health care ever mentions the necessity of actual food, clothing, jobs and housing as the most basic necessities for decent health? Chemicals from drug companies sometimes put off the symptoms until a little later. They seldom if ever produce a cure. I think it is about time for Americans to begin to wake up and get some basic knowledge about health.

Doesn`t anyone else find it

Doesn`t anyone else find it rather curious that states are scrambling with deep cuts to health care AND other entitlements for the poor just in time for a mass influx from the fed? Colorado DHP&F is sitting on a $3.5 Billion MEDICAID Budget that serves according to latest census data 450,000 disabled citizens age 5+ and they just got caught red handed trying to hide $8 Million in over payments or in blunt terms billing the federal tax payers for procedures patients never received and furthermore 75% of repetitive tests they demand are pure waste for conditions that are lifelong and incurable...to fix this problem federal funding MUST go directly to those for whom it is intended NOT proven crooked bureaucrats whose administrative costs include every 12 to 24 months brand new cars, paid plates, insurance and gas, wardrobe, meals various junkets and their health care plan even covered a spouse working as self employed carpenter who when he cut himself with a power tool he dropped it injuring their pet and YEAH the damn vet bill was covered while we MEDICAID clients cannot even get dental or optical care! SCREW THAT FECES fire their butts and put those funds in the hands of the intended!

Sanctuary cities and states

Sanctuary cities and states seem to be the ones who are hurting the most. We can't take care of those who are here Legally, yet some scratch their heads in confusion when the burden of providing services to the millions who are in this country illegally. Meanwhile states like California are in a major mess, begging for bailout monies!

Bailouts and handouts to the

Bailouts and handouts to the rich and well-connected while the poor are shoved out the exits. Welfare for the rich, and free-market discipline for everyone else. While the rich man's press whips up fear of the immigrant and other distractions, the ignorant public, believing that the truth and the news are the same things, are easily duped into blaming yet another victim of the corporate capitalists assault on society. What is this besides class warfare? The fact that universal single-payer health care is supported by over 80% of the population, yet is dismissed as unrealistic by the corporate lackeys that make up our legislatures, speaks volumes about the kind of top-down "democracy" we have. Federal money is OUR money. When the maddened king stamps his foot, (wage) slaves in their quarters tremble.