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New National Study spotlights importance of
Federal Medicare Funding to propping-up
Seniors' deteriorating State Medicaid
Benefits and Services
Amid historic recession and State fscal
crises, analysis finds $4.7 billion gap
between Medicaid Payments and actual
Seniors' Care Costs
WASHINGTON, Dec. 8 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Highlighting the importance of robust
federal Medicare funding for seniors and the
long-term care providers they depend upon, a
new Eljay LLC analysis of the nation's
deteriorating Medicaid financing system
projects states will cumulatively under fund
the actual cost of providing quality
long-term care by nearly $4.7 billion for
2009.
In the context of ongoing health care
reform, the Chair of the American Health
Care Association (AHCA) said adequate
Medicare funding in a final bill is "a
literal lifeline" to the nation's oldest,
most vulnerable seniors.
"As the already vast gap between the actual
cost of providing quality eldercare and what
the Medicaid program actually finances
continues to grow, Medicare-funded nursing
home care increasingly serves as a literal
lifeline to providers and the 1.7 million
U.S. seniors under our care," stated Robert
Van Dyk, the AHCA Chair. "With so many of
the nation's Governors forced to freeze or
cut vulnerable seniors' Medicaid benefits
and services due to catastrophic budget
shortfalls - projected to grow still worse -
ensuring robust Medicare funding in a final
health reform bill is increasingly
critical."
Van Dyk praised House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA) and other key leaders for recognizing
and beginning to act upon the Medicaid
funding crisis plaguing seniors' eldercare
needs.
"The Nursing Facility Supplemental Payment
Program contained within the Affordable
Health Care for America Act (H.R.3962),
represents a first step in acknowledging the
nation's chronic Medicaid underfunding
crisis - which we now know shortchanges
seniors' nursing home care more by nearly
$4.7 billion annually."
He continued, however, to express concern
with the level of cuts to Medicare-funded
nursing home care in the House bill - $23.9
billion over ten years - in light of both
the growing dependence upon Medicare to
prop-up Medicaid, and the fact that Medicare
cuts of up to $16 billion were just put into
effect on October 1, 2009.
The AHCA Chair also commended U.S. Senator
Ron Wyden (D-OR) for working to include a
key provision in the Senate health reform
bill Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (H.R. 3590) that will help get to the
root of the decade-long Medicaid under
funding crisis: a provision to require the
Medicare Payment Advisory Committee (MedPAC)
to review and report on Medicaid funding
when making recommendations about Medicare
payments.
"Both the Wyden Amendment and the Nursing
Facility Supplemental Payment Program in the
House bill are solid, smart public policy
initiatives that merit inclusion in a final
health reform bill."
The largest payer for long-term care in the
nation, Medicaid pays for more than
two-thirds of skilled nursing facility
patient-days annually. Each state sets a
daily care reimbursement rate ostensibly
tied to the "allowable costs" of providing
care in that state - costs such as 24-hour
nursing care; three meals per day with
important dietary supplements; other
essential care services for grooming,
personal care, bathing, and eating; medical
supplies such as beds and wheelchairs;
social activities, and more in a number of
states.
Key findings of the new Eljay LLC Medicaid
report are as follows:
-- The average shortfall in Medicaid
nursing home reimbursement is
projected to be $4.7 billion for 2009,
or, $14.17 per Medicaid patient
day.
-- Medicare continues to play an
important role in the
cross-subsidization of Medicaid
deficits. According to the Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission or MedPAC,
the average margin on Medicare
payment to nursing homes in 2007 was
14.5% while our analysis
indicates a 9.0% shortfall on Medicaid
payment for that year. The
weighted average 2007 margin from the
two government funded programs
combined is a negative 1.2%.
-- The Medicaid reimbursement outlook for
2010 and 2011 is bleak. It is
worse than any other year in the last
seven in which this annual
Report has been compiled due to
unprecedented state budget deficits
and expiration of federal stimulus
funds at the end of 2010.
-- In 2009, for every dollar of allowable
cost incurred for a Medicaid
patient, the Medicaid program
reimbursed, on average, approximately 92
cents.
-- States continue to rely heavily upon
provider taxes to fund nursing
home reimbursement. However, most
states with provider taxes chose not
to increase nursing home reimbursement
nor lower the provider tax rate
as a result of a temporary higher
federal match rate on these tax
funds under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA).
Instead, the savings from a higher
federal match rate on provider tax
funds appears, in most states, to have
gone to subsidize state budget
deficits.
-- States continue to redirect more of
their long-term care budgets to
non-institutional services. This
heightened competition among
long-term care programs for limited
state resources combined with
sagging state economies has dampened
2010 Medicaid rate increases.
This negative trend will likely
continue in 2011 as the economic
outlook for states remains bleak and
because of the expiration of the
higher temporary ARRA federal match
rates (FMAP) as of January 1,
2011.nbsp; 2011.nbsp; 2011.nbsp; 2011.nbsp; 2011.
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