Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
In Ala. Medicaid Spending Debate, House Panel Raises Budget But It's Still Short Of Goal
The Alabama Medicaid Agency would get an additional $15 million under a General Fund budget approved by a committee today, still well short of what the agency requested. Medicaid Commissioner Stephanie Azar told the House Ways and Means General Fund Committee that the increase in the agency's General Fund appropriation, to $700 million, would not be enough to sustain its transformation to managed care. That means the state would lose up to $747 million in federal funds to help with the transformation under a five-year project, Azar said. (Cason, 3/9)
[T]he increases in the General Fund, passed on a voice vote Wednesday, are short of what Medicaid needs to function and dont address structural issues with funding state services. ... The new revenue led to a $15 million increase for the Alabama Medicaid Agency, bringing its General Fund allocation from $685 million to $700 million. Medicaid says it needs $100 million to maintain services and implement regional care organizations (RCOs), which would move Medicaid to a managed care model and aim to slow cost growth in the program. (Lyman, 3/9)
The South Carolina Medicaid agency is attempting to further rein in spending after the state overspent nearly $60 million last fiscal year on low-income patients with behavioral health problems, including thousands of children with attention deficit disorder. The excess spending was a result of fraudulent claims filed by Medicaid providers, according to the state agency. (Asberry, 3/9)
Wellness centers owned by the companies managing Iowas Medicaid program wont necessarily pose a problem, the states human-services director said Wednesday. I dont think we should jump out of pocket and say its a bad idea, Charles Palmer said. ... The subject was raised Wednesday by Kim Spading, a University of Iowa pharmacist who serves on the state Human Services Council. Spading alluded to concerns that clinics run by the managed-care companies would have a conflict of interests, because they would be providing services and paying the bills. (Leys, 3/9)