The Jindal administration is preparing to roll out about $860 million in cuts to the government’s insurance program that delivers health care
to Louisiana’s poor — the result of newly authorized federal Medicaid
funding reductions critics call disastrous.
Major health care
providers said Friday they are preparing for something they know cannot
be good for them or the poor, elderly and disabled once the funds are
stripped from the $7.7 billion Medicaid program.
One association that provides community services to the
developmentally disabled is already calling for a special legislative
session to generate revenues to offset more cuts in the fiscal year that
began Sunday.
Another association executive wondered whether the
state could still have a viable program that meets federal Medicaid
“access to care” requirements.
Jindal will have his balanced budget on the backs of the poor, the ill, the disabled, the suffering, because we can never, ever raise taxes on the rich. In fact, we can never raise taxes on anyone.
But wait! Jindal has a plan, which has not yet been announced. What will it be? Stretchers in the streets to save hospital costs? Will the administration close down the primary care clinics, so that the poor will have to wait until they are so sick that they go to the emergency room, and the state and the rest of us will pay for care that's far more costly than primary care in a clinic?
“There’s not a lot of good choices,” said state Senate Health and
Welfare chairman David Heitmeier, D-New Orleans, who said discussions
can begin once the plan is laid out.
“It’s going to be
devastating. There’s no way to sugar- coat it,” said Louisiana House
Health and Welfare Committee Chairman Scott Simon, R-Abita Springs.
....
Louisiana State Medical Society Executive Vice President Jeff
Williams said whatever the administration comes up with is going to have
to be system-wide and a systemic change.
Williams said a provision in the federal law that requires reimbursement rates to
physicians and other providers to be sufficient enough to ensure
Medicaid patients have the same access to health care as a private-pay
patient.
Whatever the proposed plan, it will not solve the looming catastrophe that will result from the severe budget cuts in state Medicaid services. Perhaps Jindal counts on supernatural help to solve the state's budget problems, as he did in his university days
when he performed an exorcism on his friend.
Note: You have to pay to read the entire article on the exorcism, but you get the idea from the first page.