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LETTERS
State must provide more funding for Medicaid patients
I Since 1999, the number of Illinoisans covered by Medicaid and KidCare has grown nearly 10 percent. Fourteen thousand pregnant women who couldn't afford prenatal care in the past are getting it now through the KidCare program. In addition, more aged, blind and disabled Illinoisans are getting the help they need because lawmakers expanded the Medicaid program. Illinois hospitals applaud these expansions; they were the right thing to do. But instead of providing the funding hospitals need and deserve to care for more patients, Medicaid base inpatient payments to hospitals have been frozen for over eight years. To make matters worse, the state in January cut payments to hospitals by $30 million annually by imposing a charge cap that hits especially hard at hospitals that provide perinatal care for high-risk infants. Unless the state pays hospitals fairly for caring for Medicaid and KidCare patients, hospitals face an unpalatable choice: limit care to the poor and uninsured in order to remain solvent, or continue to serve the entire community and risk bankruptcy and closure. If more Illinoisans get health care coverage but the hospitals they depend on aren't there to serve them, what has really been gained?
Kenneth C. Robbins
40 May 2001 Illinois Issues http://illinoisissues.uis.edu |
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