W.Va. Free Health Clinics Asked to Do More with Less

West Virginia has been plagued for the past few years with budget deficits. To deal with the shortfalls, the governor has cut state agency budgets across the board, implemented hiring freezes and dipped into the state’s Rainy Day Fund.

This year, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin cut the House and Senate approved budget by an additional $11 million, leaving some service programs to wonder how they’ll keep their doors open. The Charleston Health Right is just one of those service programs.

The West Virginia Health Right clinic located in Charleston’s East End is a free and charitable clinic that provides medical, dental and vision services to more than 15,000 uninsured and underinsured West Virginians each year. 

Beginning July 1, 2015, though, the Charleston clinic, along with nine other clinics across the state, will see a significant reduction in their budget. Executive Director Angie Settle said the cut for her location will be nearly 33 percent.

After two years of 7.5 percent across the board cuts from  Tomblin, Settle’s location will have 48 percent less funding than three years ago. Settle said they’ve looked to cut waste wherever possible, but there is little left to find.

Because of the clinics’ ability to bill Medicaid, something the Charleston clinic began doing in January 2014,Tomblin said in his veto message those clinics should be able to recover part of the money cut. 

But Settle said that statement just isn’t true for her clinic. In 2014, her clinic brought in $188,000 from Medicaid billing, but spent nearly $100,000 on a person to do the billing and the software and IT upgrades to make it possible. 

Settle said even though the start up costs are complete, Medicaid billing won’t make up for her 2016 33 percent budget cut for two reasons. First, because of notoriously low Medicaid reimbursement rates, and second because of the population she serves.

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Executive Director of West Virginia Health Right Angie Settle.

“More than half of the patients we see are the working poor,” she said. “West Virginians with two and three jobs.”

Medicaid allows clinics to bill for some services, but Settle said they often won’t reimburse multiple services that occur on the same day. Because she serves a population who may be prohibited from going to multiple appointments because of their work schedule, child care, or ability to pay for transportation, Settle said her patients just won’t return for multiple appointments.

“It reminds me of almost like a NASCAR pit stop when people come here. We [do] everything we can do for them that day. Talk to them about smoking cessation, dental health, get their blood pressure checked, get their blood work done, get their pap smear if its due, give them a slip to go get a mammogram. Everything we can pack into that visit, as much bang for the buck in that day,” she said of their philosophy of care.

Sometimes Medicaid will cover one or all of those services, and sometimes they won’t, Settle said, but she doesn’t see that as incentive to change the way they serve their population, 50 percent of which have Medicaid coverage and 50 percent of which have no insurance at all.

“By squashing funding to free clinics and saying we don’t want to fund free clinics, it basically tells the people of West Virginia, the working poor, we want you to quit your job so you can get on Medicaid,” she said. “It says we don’t want you to work. We want you to quit your job and get on Medicaid or go without.”

Senate Finance Vice Chair Chris Walters said he and his fellow lawmakers tried to work with the clinics to get their line item appropriations in a workable range, knowing the governor intended to make cuts. He said he understands the importance of the clinics to their communities, but lawmakers had to make tough choices to balance the overall budget.

Walters said the state is expecting another budget deficit in 2016, but said lawmakers are working to come up with ways to increase revenues.

New Public-Private Partnership Will Help At-Risk Medicaid Patients

A public-private partnership to identify and provide help for at-risk Medicaid patients was announced Wednesday.

The state has teamed up with the nonprofit company Partners in Health Network. Cabinet Secretary Karen Bowling, with the Department of Health and Human Resources, explained the program. She said the first step is to identify Medicaid patients who visit emergency rooms often.

“Then actually targeting those beneficiaries to ensure they’re really getting the help they need, they’re getting the care they need, but they’re getting it in the right setting,” she said.

Bowling said that through Partners in Health, the program can focus on preventive care and keep those patients out of the emergency room. She said the partnership will improve care for Medicaid patients and ultimately cut down on costs.

Bowling said programs such as this one are important in coming up with new ways to solve health care issues in West Virginia.

“As we begin to think about how do we change things, and move West Virginia in the right direction to change our health outcomes, we have got to have these types of programs in place so that there is sort of an acknowledgement of the need to do things differently.”

The program took effect at the beginning of the year.  The first step will be to collect data that can target the Medicaid patients benefit from it.

WVU Grant Aims to Improve Health Care

West Virginia University is getting a nearly $2 million grant to help improve health care statewide.

The university’s public health school will use the award to coordinate health care planning activities across the state in partnership with West Virginia officials.

The Charleston Daily Mail reports that the initiative is supported by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Technical and financial support is being made available to states that design and test innovative payment and service delivery models aimed at improving health care and lowering costs for Medicare, Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program recipients.

Officials say the goal will be to work with health care consumers, providers, payers and other agencies to develop innovative approaches to improve the quality of health care and control cost in West Virginia.

New Drug Can Cure Hepatitis C – If Only We Could Afford It

The pill is called Sovaldi and it’s profoundly changing outcomes for Hepatitis C patients.Just 5 years ago the cure rate for most patients in the US was…

The pill is called Sovaldi and it’s profoundly changing outcomes for Hepatitis C patients.

Just 5 years ago the cure rate for most patients in the US was about 50%. Now with Sovaldi, made by Gilead Sciences Inc. of California and approved by the FDA last December, the latest Hep C regimen is making therapy shorter, more tolerable, and the cure rate is reaching 95-100 %.

That’s significant for West Virginia, which has the second highest prevalence of Hepatitis C in the country.

Hepatitis C is a blood-born disease primarily affecting the liver. It spreads today mostly among drug users sharing needles, although some were infected before widespread screening of the blood supply through transfusions and transplants.

The virus is also transmitted through poorly sterilized medical equipment, sometimes found in tattoo parlors, and in rare cases it’s transmitted through sexual activity, or from mother to newborn.

Sovaldi is a blessing that comes with a staggering price tag. Therapy usually lasts 12 weeks, but it could take 24. It’s one pill a day and costs $1000 a pill. That comes to $84,000 per 12-week treatment.

Even with the 23.1% discount that the program receives from drug companies, Sovaldi could be a budget-buster for West Virginia’s Medicaid Program, which provides healthcare to 540,000 West Virginians, 16,000 of whom have Hepatitis C.

So the Bureau of Medical Services, like state Medicaid programs across the country, is restricting coverage – establishing pre-authorization criteria that a patient must meet before the government will pay for the drug.

West Virginia’s criteria are stricter than some states, more lenient than others. The patient must be alcohol and drug free for 3 months prior to treatment and committed to staying substance free. 

The rules also limit the drug to sicker patients – patients who have reached a certain level of liver fibrosis, or scarring.

James Becker, MD, Medical Director for the West Virginia Medicaid Program, says prioritizing is necessary in a public payer system that is responsible for the treatment of multiple serious and chronic diseases and conditions.

But physicians want to treat their patients before any signs of fibrosis.

It’s estimated to it would cost 1.4b this year to treat all of West Virginia’s Medicaid recipients who have Hepatitis C.

The state’s Medicaid pharmacy budget is approximately $350 million annually.

As of early October, Medicaid had received 100 requests by physicians for Sovaldi treatments.

Fourteen were approved,  86 were denied.

W.Va. Officials Launch Behavioral Health Program

  West Virginia officials are launching an initiative to help Medicaid members with behavioral health diagnoses live healthier and happier lives.

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources Bureau for Medical Services said it launched the Health Homes initiative for behavioral health on July 1.

As part of the program, a team of professionals coordinates to help manage medical conditions and medications, remember doctor appointments and understand medical tests and results. Teams will also work with doctors, counselors and specialists to support recovery and prevent other illnesses or complications.

The program is available in Cabell, Kanawha, Mercer, Putnam, Raleigh and Wayne counties. Officials say those locations were selected because of the high rates of individuals who are already being treated for behavioral disorders.

W.Va. Increases Spending on Home Care for Disabled

  West Virginia has increased the amount it spends to allow the disabled to live outside institutions in the years since a landmark Supreme Court ruling.

The 1999 decision said unnecessarily segregating people in mental hospitals, nursing homes and other institutions amounts to discrimination. Advocates for the mentally ill, older people and the disabled cite the ruling in arguing for home- or community-based care. The ruling has limitations. It says individuals should be “reasonably accommodated” and offers no guidance on allotting funds.

In 2002, West Virginia spent nearly 38 percent of Medicaid funds on such services. In 2012, the figure was more than 47 percent.

Nationally in 2012, states devoted an average of 49.5 percent of Medicaid long-term care funding for home settings, compared to 31.1 percent a decade earlier.

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