Federal Secretary, Patients Cite 'Obamacare' Impact

Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Mathews Burwell visited Charleston today to voice support for the Affordable Care Act.

Burwell came as part of a West Virginians for Affordable Health Care event to advocate for universal and affordable health care.

The event included testimonials from eight West Virginians who have benefited from various provisions in the Affordable Care Act.  Advocates of the law, including Secretary Burwell say they are very concerned about the future of the ACA under the leadership of president-elect Donald Trump.

Donald Trump has said under his administration, the Affordable Care Act will be repealed. Of particular concern to advocates is the future of protective ACA provisions, including expanded Medicaid, the ability to stay on parental insurance policies until age 26 and the inability of insurance companies to deny coverage to patients with preexisting conditions.

In the past six years, about 20 million people have gained healthcare coverage in the United States under the ACA, including more than 220,000 West Virginians. Advocates say they will fight to protect this coverage in the coming months.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Federal Secretary to Discuss 'Obamacare' in Charleston

Federal health Secretary Sylvia Burwell plans to join a discussion in her native West Virginia on the federal health law that expanded insurance coverage to 165,000 residents.

The Affordable Care Act is a signature Obama administration initiative that president-elect Donald Trump has vowed to at least partly roll back.

Trump has praised its guaranteed insurance coverage of people with pre-existing conditions and allowing young adults to remain on parents’ policies until age 26.

That 2010 law, called “Obamacare,” established federally supported exchanges where almost 13 million U.S. residents have enrolled for commercial insurance, some qualifying for subsidies.

Another 7 million people joined expanded Medicaid for poor and disabled residents.

West Virginia reports covering 179,653 more people in Medicaid by raising income eligibility to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.

State Agencies Release Major Plan to Improve State's Healthcare System

The Department of Health and Human Resources and the West Virginia University School of Public Health released a major plan this week to improve the state’s healthcare system.

The two agencies recommend that a third, independent nonprofit group be founded. This nonprofit would coordinate state and federal healthcare resources and oversee the transition from fee-for-service payment (you pay based on the services you receive) to value-based healthcare (you pay based on your health outcomes).

The WVU School of Public Health developed the plan on behalf of the DHHR over the course of 18 months. The two agencies submitted the plan to the federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, which originally awarded funds for the plan’s development. The CMS federal grant program provides funding so states can develop plans to improve quality of care and reduce costs to consumers. West Virginia received almost 2 million dollars.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Free Healthcare Clinic Being Offered in Beckley This Week

Over 500 healthcare professionals and volunteers will operate a no-cost medical and dental clinic in Beckley this week. on July 13-15, 2016.Approximately…

Over 500 healthcare professionals and volunteers will operate a no-cost medical and dental clinic in Beckley  this week. on July 13-15, 2016.

Approximately $3 million in free health-related services will beoffered to noninsured and underinsured residents of Beckley and surrounding areas at the Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center July 13 – 15. The event is organized by Your Best Pathway to Health, a service of Adventist-Laymen’s Services & Industries, in partnership with the Seventh-day Adventist Church and many other entities.

Services will be offered on a first come, first served basis. No insurance and no identification are required. The free clinic runs from 7:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. on July 13 & 14, and from 7:00 a.m. – noon on July 15. No appointment is necessary.

Is Medicaid Expansion Contributing to WV Budget Crisis?

In 2013, Governor Tomblin chose to expand the state’s Medicaid program, providing healthcare coverage for 150,000 more West Virginians. Up until this point, Medicaid expansion has had no impact on the state’s budget.

That’s because from 2013-2016, the federal government paid for 100 percent of the additional people covered by Medicaid due to the expansion. For West Virginia, that federal funding totaled 700 million dollars.

But next year, the Medicaid expansion agreement between states and the federal government will begin to change.

“Starting in January of 2017, West Virginia will have to pay a 5 percent match for Medicaid Expansion. In the governor’s budget that’s 14 million extra dollars for next year,” said Renate Pore, director of health policy for West Virginians for Affordable Healthcare.

In 2018, the state will have to match 6 percent, then 7 the following year, until by 2020 the match will cap at 10 percent and approximately 50 million additional dollars out of the state budget to pay for Medicaid.

“Although over time the federal match goes down, if you really look at the implications on the health and wellbeing of the people in the state it’s actually a positive impact,” said Department of Health and Human Resources Secretary Karen Bowling.

Bowling said choosing to expand the state’s Medicaid program was hugely beneficial for both the people of West Virginia and the state’s hospitals. With more people covered by insurance, fewer were going to the emergency room and leaving hospitals on the hook for a bill they couldn’t pay, leading to lower overall healthcare costs in the state.

But advocates like Pore they are worried about how the state will continue funding Medicaid.

“We are concerned about where is the money going to come from for the state match…so yeah it puts a strain on the state budget and I guess you could say it is contributing to the deficit,” she said.

Pore said she thinks both the Medicaid program and the expansion are essential programs for West Virginia.

“But I’m not unrealistic. It is expensive for the state,” Pore said. “And even though we have a great federal match, it’s still a huge cost for West Virginia. The cost to West Virginia next year will be almost a billion – 1 billion – dollars and every year that goes up. So as an advocate my concern is to create some stable source of funding.”

Or Medicaid patients – expansion or not – may soon not have access to care.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Report: 97 Percent of West Virginia Children are Insured

A new report says 97 percent of children in West Virginia are covered by health insurance.

The report by Georgetown University Health Policy Institute’s Center for Children and Families says West Virginia’s 3 percent rate of uninsured children is among the lowest in the country.

The report ranks West Virginia fourth in the nation. Massachusetts is ranked first with a 1.5 percent rate of uninsured children.

According to the report, West Virginia reduced the number of uninsured children by 43.7 percent from 2013 to 2014.

West Virginia Children’s Health Insurance Program director Sharon Carte says the state faces many health challenges. She says in a news release that the low rate of uninsured children provides a foundation on which to build a healthy future.

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