Avik
Roy, Contributor
The Apothecary is a
blog about health-care and entitlement reform.
How Do Blue States
Expand Medicaid? By Paying Doctors Less
New York, Rhode
Island, New Jersey, California, D.C., Maine, Florida, Illinois, Minnesota, and
Michigan have the lowest Medicaid reimbursement.New York has
the worst Medicaid primary care reimbursement rates in the nation.
The biggest
health-policy debate in America right now is whether or not states should opt
in to Obamacare’s dramatic expansion of Medicaid, our government-run health
care program for the poor. Governors from both parties are concerned that the
costs of the expansion will be higher than projected, and that the federal
government will back out of its funding commitments. But if you want to see the
future of Medicaid, all you have to do is look at the blue states where
progressives hold sway, where governments have expanded Medicaid by paying
doctors less.
Medicaid
suffers from the developed world’s worst health outcomes. The main reason is
that the program pays doctors and hospitals so little that many doctors lose
money treating Medicaid patients. As a result, many doctors don’t take Medicaid,
and people on Medicaid die sooner from cancers that could have been adequately
treated at an earlier stage.
Given that
Medicaid is jointly run by the states and the federal government, I thought it
would be a useful exercise to look at how much Medicaid pays doctors on a
state-by-state basis. The best data we have comes from a 2009 Urban Institute
study by Stephen Zuckerman, Aimee Williams, and Karen Stockley, showing how state
Medicaid fees vary from state to state, relative to Medicare’s fees. Medicare,
in turn, pays doctors approximately 80 percent of what private insurers pay. I
combined these data, and then created a map that illustrates the distribution
of reimbursement rates, which you can click to enlarge.
What’s notable
is that, of the ten Medicaid states (including D.C.) that pay doctors the
least, relative to private insurers, nine are reliably blue: New York (29
percent), Rhode Island (29%), New Jersey (32%), California (38%), D.C. (38%),
Maine (42%), Florida (44%), Illinois (46%), Minnesota (46%), and Michigan
(47%).
By contrast, of
the ten states that pay doctors the most, nine usually vote red: Alaska (113%),
Wyoming (94%), Idaho (82%), North Dakota (81%), Delaware (80%), Oklahoma (80%),
New Mexico (79%), Arizona (78%), Montana (77%), and North Carolina (76%).
Tennessee doesn’t use a fee-for-service formula for its Medicaid programs, so
its fees couldn’t be compared to those of the other states.
The point of
this analysis isn’t partisan. Some blue states, like Delaware, pay doctors
reasonably well, and some red states, like Texas, don’t. But there is a rough
correlation of states with extensive Medicaid programs to those with poor
physician reimbursement.
Due to the way
in which the federal government provides matching funds for state Medicaid
programs, states have an incentive to game the system by increasing Medicaid
spending. For every dollar that a state spends on Medicaid, the federal
government spends an additional $1.33. Fiscally irresponsible governors love
that they can take political credit for expanding Medicaid, knowing that
taxpayers in other states are picking up the majority of the tab.
But because
Medicaid spending grows at a much faster rate than other types of spending,
drunken Medicaid expansions result in a fiscal hangover. Today, in a
recessionary environment, states are facing expanded Medicaid rolls, with less
tax revenue to fund them. On top of that, Obamacare bars states from rolling
back their Medicaid eligibility criteria—a provision that may face legal
challenges, in the aftermath of the recent Supreme Court ruling. Even before
Obamacare, the mandarins at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
would routinely block states from reducing their Medicaid populations.
So, if states
need to reduce Medicaid spending, but can’t make less people eligible for
Medicaid, what do they do? Pay doctors less. “As in previous years, provider
rate restrictions were the most commonly reported cost containment strategy,”
concludes an extensive Kaiser review of state-based changes to Medicaid in
2012. “A total of 39 states restricted provider rates in [fiscal year] 2011,
and 46 states reported plans to do so in FY 2012.” Note that the Medicaid rates
I supplied above are from 2008, and therefore four years out of date.
Obamacare
includes a temporary, two-year bump in Medicaid fees for primary care, expiring
in 2014. Progressives hope that this bump will become permanent, in the way
that the Medicare “docfix” has. But our $1.4 trillion budget deficit makes that
outcome unlikely. States that go forward with Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion
are almost certain to compensate for it by reducing their provider payments.
Don’t say you weren’t warned.
Are doctors in
California, for example, less likely to accept Medicaid patients since they’ll
get paid less?
Surprisingly,
the academic literature suggests that’s not the case. There’s surprisingly
little connection between how much a state pays its Medicaid doctors and the
rate at which they accept new patients. The Center for Studying Health Care
Change looked for such a connection in a 2009. It found that 42 percent of
primary care doctors were willing to accept new Medicaid patients, fewer than
would take on new private patients.
But when they
looked for variation by state, the researchers had trouble finding anything
significant. “On average, there is no variation in Medicaid acceptance rates
among PCPs [primary care providers] depending on the overall level of PCP
supply in the state,” the study concludes. “This is unexpected given that
low-PCP states have substantially higher Medicaid reimbursement for primary
care on average compared to high-PCP states.”
Factors other
than reimbursement rates seemed to be better predictors of a physicians’
willingness to accept Medicaid. Doctors who work for a fixed salary — and
therefore are a bit insulated from reimbursement rates — tend to have
significantly more Medicaid patients than those who work on a fee-for-service
basis.
But the HSC
study she cites relates to the supply of primary care physicians, not
what they’re paid. A different HSC study, by Chapin White, states clearly that
“Increasing Medicaid fees is…clearly related to a reduction in…access
problems.”
Furthermore,
Sarah notes that doctors on a fixed salary, who are insulated from low
reimbursement rates, see more Medicaid patients. This reinforces the notion
that the low reimbursement rates are a barrier, not the opposite.
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