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Doctors report they cannot afford to take new Medicaid and Medicare Patients!
By Caroline May - reporter
for The Daily Caller.
H/T
Daily Caller
Thirty-six percent of doctors say they are no longer accepting new Medicaid patients due in large part to declining reimbursements, a new national survey has found.
Thirty-six percent of doctors say they are no longer accepting new Medicaid patients due in large part to declining reimbursements, a new national survey has found.
The
survey of 2,232 physicians across all specialties conducted in late April by
Jackson Healthcare in Atlanta — the fourth-largest health care staffing company
in the U.S. — further found that broken down for specialty, 66 percent of
dermatologists, 64 percent of endocrinologists, 58 percent of internists, 57
percent of physical medicine and rehabilitation doctors and 53 of adult
psychiatrists said they are no longer able to take on more Medicaid patients.
Other
specialties in the survey with a high percentage of doctors who reported
stopping accepting Medicaid patients include orthopedic surgeons (50 percent),
family practitioners (45 percent), gastroenterologists (47 percent),
neurologists (43 percent), cardiologists (39 percent) and urologists (35
percent).
Currently
26 percent of physicians see no Medicaid patients at all, the survey reported.
According
to the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, under the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (the constitutionality of which is currently
under consideration at the Supreme Court), Medicaid enrollment could increase
by 22.8 million by 2019.
According
to Richard L. Jackson, chairman and CEO of Jackson Healthcare, the low
reimbursement rate paired with the large influx of new Medicaid patients will
be a problem.
“This
is creating the perfect storm that will make it very difficult for the poor and
elderly to access a doctor,” Jackson said. “Physicians say they just can’t
afford to be part of a system that generates so many patients for so little
compensation.”
The
survey further noted that 17 percent of physicians said they could no longer
afford to see new Medicare patients and 10 percent reported not seeing Medicare
patients at all.
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