Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mississippi Governor Slammed For Stance Against Medicaid Expansion
Standing inside a shuttered hospital鈥檚 abandoned emergency room in Newton County, Miss., on Monday night, Democratic candidate for governor Brandon Presley blamed Gov. Tate Reeves for the fact that more than half of the state鈥檚 rural hospitals are in danger of closing. 鈥淭his is the reality that Tate Reeves has chosen to put us in. Make no mistake, he made this choice,鈥 Presley, a public service commissioner who hopes to unseat Reeves in this year鈥檚 elections, said in a video he released on YouTube Monday night. (Crown, 2/2)
Mississippi鈥檚 Republican Gov. Tate Reeves said in a private conversation that expanding Medicaid to people working low-wage jobs would be in the best interest of the state, but that he refuses to support the policy for political reasons, a former chancellor of the University of Mississippi said Thursday. Dr. Dan Jones is a physician who led the University of Mississippi Medical Center before serving as chancellor of the university from 2009 to 2015. During a news conference organized by Democratic state lawmakers on Thursday, Jones said that Reeves acknowledged in a private conversation with him in 2013 or 2014 that expanding Medicaid would benefit Mississippi鈥檚 economy, and provide health care to more residents of a state bedeviled by poor health outcomes. (Goldberg, 2/2)
More than 15 bills that would have expanded Medicaid to provide health care coverage to primarily the working poor died on Tuesday night without debate or a vote. No committee chair in either the Senate or House held a hearing on those Medicaid expansion bills. The House Medicaid Committee, where Speaker of the House Philip Gunn assigned all of the his chamber鈥檚 expansion bills, did not even meet a single time before the Jan. 31 deadline to consider general bills. (Harrison, 2/1)
People across the U.S. will lose Medicaid benefits 鈥
The director of Missouri鈥檚 Medicaid program said he expects 鈥渁bout 200,000鈥 Medicaid enrollees to lose coverage over the course of a year as a result of the state resuming annual eligibility renewals after a three-year pause. (Bates, 2/2)
Changes are on the way for Medicaid enrollees as pandemic-era standards are set to come to an end in the spring. Beginning Wednesday, the Department of Health and Welfare will begin sending notices to the roughly 150,000 people enrolled in Medicaid who no longer qualify. During the pandemic, the federal government halted state departments from ending anyone鈥檚 Medicaid coverage and allowed continuous enrollment. (Bruhl, 2/1)
Some Kentuckians who signed up for Medicaid during the COVID-19 pandemic will soon have to shop around to maintain health insurance coverage, Gov. Andy Beshear said Thursday. The Democratic governor said his administration intends to help people through the transition. 鈥淭his is a big job,鈥 Beshear said at his weekly news conference. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 one we鈥檝e been planning on for many months and it鈥檚 one that we will continue to refine our planning.鈥 (Schreiner, 2/2)
In other Medicaid updates 鈥
Executives at BAKA Enterprises, the senior living management company for Emerald Bay Retirement Community & Memory Care in Hobart, held a virtual press conference Thursday morning to explain why they decided to evict some residents from the facility. ... Emerald Bay executives say that the decision to cancel Medicaid contracts is due to a combination of the unprecedented rise in costs associated with providing care during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the low reimbursement rates received from Medicaid, which made it difficult to maintain a high standard of care. (2/2)
Any Medicaid raise makes a difference to all nursing homes in today鈥檚 tight financial environment. But for one historic nonprofit Pennsylvania facility, a final rate determination this month made the difference between preserving a 146-year legacy of service and selling to a for-profit buyer. The board of the Inglis Foundation, the operator of the 252-bed Inglis House outside of Philadelphia, said Tuesday that it had canceled a planned $22 million sale. The decision was spurred by the January posting of new Pennsylvania Medicaid rates for individual nursing homes. (Marselas, 2/2)
The official who oversaw the conversion of North Carolina鈥檚 Medicaid agency to managed care will retire from state government at the end of the month, the state health department said on Thursday. Dave Richard, the deputy secretary for Medicaid for the last eight years, guided the $21 billion program through the overhaul that went live in July 2021. State Medicaid moved from a traditional fee-for-service model to one in which provider organizations receive fixed monthly payments for every patient seen and treated. (2/2)