McClatchy DC Logo

Health services advocates are apprehensive about federal budget debate | McClatchy Washington Bureau

×
    • Customer Service
    • Mobile & Apps
    • Contact Us
    • Newsletters
    • Subscriber Services

    • All White House
    • Russia
    • All Congress
    • Budget
    • All Justice
    • Supreme Court
    • DOJ
    • Criminal Justice
    • All Elections
    • Campaigns
    • Midterms
    • The Influencer Series
    • All Policy
    • National Security
    • Guantanamo
    • Environment
    • Climate
    • Energy
    • Water Rights
    • Guns
    • Poverty
    • Health Care
    • Immigration
    • Trade
    • Civil Rights
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Cybersecurity
    • All Nation & World
    • National
    • Regional
    • The East
    • The West
    • The Midwest
    • The South
    • World
    • Diplomacy
    • Latin America
    • Investigations
  • Podcasts
    • All Opinion
    • Political Cartoons

  • Our Newsrooms

National

Health services advocates are apprehensive about federal budget debate

By Tony Pugh - McClatchy Newspapers

    ORDER REPRINT →

December 06, 2012 04:50 PM

Health care providers and patient advocates are anxious over pending cuts to federal health programs next year if Democrats and Republicans can’t strike a deal on budget cuts and taxes by Dec. 31.

Unless Congress can agree on at least $1.2 trillion in program cuts, wide-ranging reductions in domestic and defense spending, known as “sequestration,” will begin Jan. 2.

Some services are exempt, such as veterans’ health programs, Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Funding for the main provisions of the 2010 health care law doesn’t begin until 2014, so it also wouldn’t be affected by the 2013 sequester.

But money for crucial services such as community health centers, HIV and AIDS programming, bio-medical research, disease control and prevention, and the regulation of food, drugs and medical devices would face reductions of 8.2 percent beginning next year if Congress and the White House fail to reach a compromise.

SIGN UP

Although similar sequester scares have been averted after serious negotiations, Tim Westmoreland, a law professor at the Georgetown University Law Center, wasn’t optimistic.

“This doomsday machine is going to go off this time,” said Westmoreland, who headed the Medicaid program in the final years of the Clinton administration.

If he’s right and President Barack Obama issues a sequester order on Jan. 2, Medicare would impose a 2 percent cut on payments to providers and insurers a month later.

Monthly payments to Medicare prescription-drug plans and Medicare Advantage plans – the private plans that provide Medicare benefits – also would face a 2 percent reduction, said Lisa Potetz, a principal with Health Policy Alternatives, a private consulting firm.

Medicare administrative spending would be subject to the same 8.2 percent cuts faced by most other non-defense agencies, as well, Potetz added.

In September, the Office of Management and Budget estimated that the reductions would take $11.6 billion from Medicare’s budget in 2013. The cuts would total $99 billion if the sequester were in effect for the full nine years as current law provides, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

That’s far less than the 10-year $400 billion reduction in the program that Obama envisions as part of his new proposal to avert sequestration. But an $11.6 billion funding cut would have serious consequences nonetheless.

While benefits wouldn’t be cut directly, the impact of reductions in revenue to health care providers and their effects on beneficiaries are unclear. Some worry that the 2 percent cut might lead doctors to shun Medicare patients.

That possibility that would only increase if Congress fails to prevent a separate 27 percent cut in Medicare physician-payment rates that’s scheduled to take effect Jan. 1.

Congressional action has prevented this rate reduction, triggered by Medicare’s inability to meet its targeted expenditures, for the last 11 years, and it’s almost certain to be skirted again for 2013.

Nevertheless, Potetz said it only added to the pressure lawmakers faced to strike a “fiscal cliff” deal early in order to avoid any disruptions in payments to Medicare providers.

“It’s in everybody’s interest, if it’s going to be fixed, to fix it as soon as possible,” she said.

A study commissioned by the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and the American Nurses Association estimates that nearly 500,000 jobs would be lost or not created in 2013 if the 2 percent sequester cuts for Medicare go through.

More than 40,000 of these positions would disappear from the offices of doctors, dentists and other providers, the report found.

California would be hit the hardest, with an estimated 51,000 jobs lost because of the Medicare reductions. Florida would lose about 36,000, while New York and Texas each would lose about 32,000 jobs.

Medicare’s payments to skilled-nursing facilities would face a $782 million cut next year under the sequester, according to an analysis by Avalere Health and the Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care.

Again, California, Florida and Texas would face the biggest cuts, at $76 million, $66 million and $51 million, respectively. Payments to facilities in Illinois would be trimmed by roughly $46 million, while those in Pennsylvania face a $37 million cut and North Carolina eyes a $22.5 million reduction.

Here’s how other federal health programs might be affected:

COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS

The 8,500 centers would see about 1.3 million fewer low-income patients next year if $167 million in funds is cut, according to the National Association of Community Health Centers.

“We know we’d have layoffs and we know we’d have decreased access and we know that patients, especially uninsured patients, would start to use (hospital) emergency rooms. There’s no ambiguity on our part,” said Brian Toomey, the chief executive officer of Piedmont Health Services of Carrboro, N.C., which operates seven community health centers in the state and might lose about $500,000 in federal aid next year. “The average Piedmont patient typically comes three times a year at half the cost of a single emergency-room visit. “

NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH

It would lose $2.5 billion in fiscal year 2013, resulting in about 2,400 fewer bio-medical research grants, according to a report by the Democrats on the House of Representatives Appropriations Committee. The NIH invests about $31 billion a year in research.

FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION

The FDA might see a loss of $318 million next year, even as its number of inspectors has grown by more than 8 percent over the last two years. The testing of food, drugs and medical products from other countries probably would suffer. So would the evaluation of new drugs.

“So the one-year review period that FDA is trying to get at for most products, the average drug-approval time is going to slow for those products,” said Westmoreland, the law professor. “And somebody out there is waiting for an approved oncology drug to come onto the market.”

HIV/AIDS

These programs, along with services to fight viral hepatitis, would lose $659 million, resulting in more than 400 people with HIV not being diagnosed, while 5,000 low-income households with AIDS patients would lose federal housing support, according to the National Minority AIDS Council, the Foundation for AIDS Research and the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors.

The federal AIDS Drug Assistance Program provides anti-retroviral medications for low-income people. An 8.2 percent funding cut would mean 15,700 fewer people served under the program, according to AIDS prevention groups.

“I would point out that most of those people have no place else to go for the drugs that they need," Westmoreland said. "For them, AIDS will no longer, during the sequester, be a manageable medical condition.”

HEALTH CARE LAW

While the sequester wouldn’t affect the main portions of the Affordable Care Act, such as premium subsidies for individuals and cost-sharing subsidies for the poor, funding for the Prevention and Public Health Fund and the National Health Service Corps would face a 7.6 percent funding cut in 2013, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges.

The fund, which was created by the 2010 law, has provided more than $1.2 billion in grants for local programs to help fight chronic disease, obesity, tobacco use and other health problems. The service corps repays student loans and provides scholarships for health care providers who agree to work for two years in areas that are short of caregivers. Additional money through the health care law boosted the service corps’ funding to $229 million in 2012 and has nearly tripled program enrollment since 2008.

Related stories from McClatchy DC

national

Peeking over the ‘fiscal cliff’: What’s down there?

December 06, 2012 05:58 PM

national

Transportation would suffer because of fiscal cliff and impact on economy

December 06, 2012 05:32 PM

politics-government

Fiscal cliff cuts would impact Georgia health, education and defense industry

December 06, 2012 05:22 PM

national

Border patrol, airport security might see budget cutbacks

December 06, 2012 05:16 PM

national

If fiscal cliff talks fail, teachers’ jobs, student aid, Head Start could be at risk

December 06, 2012 04:46 PM

national

Federal budget cuts would hit consumer protection agencies

December 06, 2012 04:48 PM

  Comments  

Videos

Bishop Michael Curry leads prayer during funeral for George H.W. Bush

Barack Obama surprises Michelle at event for her new book ‘Becoming’

View More Video

Trending Stories

Cell signal puts Cohen outside Prague around time of purported Russian meeting

December 27, 2018 10:36 AM

Ted Cruz’s anti-Obamacare crusade continues with few allies

December 24, 2018 10:33 AM

Sources: Mueller has evidence Cohen was in Prague in 2016, confirming part of dossier

April 13, 2018 06:08 PM

California Republicans fear even bigger trouble ahead for their wounded party

December 27, 2018 09:37 AM

Hundreds of sex abuse allegations found in fundamental Baptist churches across U.S.

December 09, 2018 06:30 AM

Read Next

California Republicans fear even bigger trouble ahead for their wounded party

Elections

California Republicans fear even bigger trouble ahead for their wounded party

By Kate Irby

    ORDER REPRINT →

December 27, 2018 09:37 AM

California Republican Party Chair Jim Brulte is sounding a warning on the GOP needing to appeal more to Asian and Latino Americans. California House Republicans don’t know how to do that.

KEEP READING

MORE NATIONAL

‘Remember the Alamo’: Meadows steels conservatives, Trump for border wall fight

Congress

‘Remember the Alamo’: Meadows steels conservatives, Trump for border wall fight

December 22, 2018 12:34 PM
Israel confounded, confused by Syria withdrawal, Mattis resignation

National Security

Israel confounded, confused by Syria withdrawal, Mattis resignation

December 21, 2018 04:51 PM
Did Pentagon ban on Guantánamo art create a market for it? See who owns prison art.

Guantanamo

Did Pentagon ban on Guantánamo art create a market for it? See who owns prison art.

December 21, 2018 10:24 AM
House backs spending bill with $5.7 billion in wall funding, shutdown inches closer

Congress

House backs spending bill with $5.7 billion in wall funding, shutdown inches closer

December 20, 2018 11:29 AM
Trump administration wants huge limits on food stamps — even though Congress said ‘no’

White House

Trump administration wants huge limits on food stamps — even though Congress said ‘no’

December 20, 2018 05:00 AM
Graham, Trump go to war over Syrian troop withdrawal

Congress

Graham, Trump go to war over Syrian troop withdrawal

December 20, 2018 02:59 PM
Take Us With You

Real-time updates and all local stories you want right in the palm of your hand.

Icon for mobile apps

McClatchy Washington Bureau App

View Newsletters

Subscriptions
  • Newsletters
Learn More
  • Customer Service
  • Securely Share News Tips
  • Contact Us
Advertising
  • Advertise With Us
Copyright
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service


Back to Story