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  • Fewer Utah physicians accepting Medicaid

    Salt Lake Tribune, United States

    Fewer Utah physicians accepting Medicaid
    By Kirsten Stewart

    The Salt Lake Tribune
    Article Last Updated: 09/15/2007 10:41:06 AM MDT

    PROVO -- Sergey Sargsyan has lost 80 pounds since his
    symptoms began more than three months ago. He's in
    pain and getting weaker.
    Emergency room visits and surgery to remove gall
    stones have done little to help. Doctors say he needs
    a specialist to fine-tune his diagnosis.
    But finding one willing to accept Medicaid as
    payment has been an exercise in futility, said Susanna
    McPhilomy, the 77-year-old's daughter. "The first
    question isn't, 'How can we help you?' " she said,
    "but 'What type of insurance do you have?' "
    Sargsyan is not alone. Health care experts are
    seeing the first of what they say could become
    widespread lack of access to care for Medicaid
    patients.
    In Utah, the number of doctors who accept Medicaid
    is shrinking.
    In fiscal year 2007, which ended in July, 3,540
    physicians billed the state-run health insurance
    program for their services.
    Due to the way the state keeps records, a small
    number of these providers may be listed twice. But
    that is also true for the number of doctors who billed
    the state in 2000 -- which was 4,210, revealing a 19
    percent drop in seven years.
    Dentists are also in short supply, down 14 percent
    from seven years ago, state Health Department data
    show.
    "I was crying." Health officials say the shortage
    hasn't reached a crisis.

    Patients aren't being turned away, though they may
    have to hunt around for a doctor willing to see them,
    or wait weeks for an appointment, said Utah Medicaid
    director Michael Hales.
    There are roughly 4,700 doctors estimated to be
    practicing in Utah.
    But that's small comfort for people like
    McPhilomy, who said her father's condition, chronic
    urinary retention possibly stemming from an enlarged
    prostate, could be lethal if left untreated.
    Sargsyan's problems started in mid-July. He was
    having problems urinating, so McPhilomy took him to
    the emergency room where doctors inserted a catheter.
    The hope was the problem would resolve itself. It
    didn't.
    On a return visit days later to the ER, a doctor
    at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center referred
    Sargsyan to a urologist for testing to see if his
    health woes stemmed from an enlarged prostate.
    McPhilomy scheduled an appointment with a doctor
    who said he accepted Medicaid. But when the family got
    to the American Fork office of physician Vernon
    Calhoon, she said, they were turned away.
    When McPhilomy objected, the receptionist
    threatened to call police, she said.
    "I was crying because I felt so humiliated. Here
    was my father, sweating and very weak and I was
    helpless to do anything about it," said McPhilomy. "If
    they were not serving Medicaid patients, they should
    not have scheduled an appointment and dragged my poor
    sick father from Provo to American Fork."
    None of Sargsyan's care providers would comment,
    citing federal privacy laws.
    A secretary in Calhoon's office, who refused to
    give her name, said, "We didn't refuse to see the
    family. We explained we're not on their panel of
    providers and they got all upset...These days you have
    to be careful. People say they have insurance, and
    they don't."
    Medicaid patients in Utah are covered by three
    different insurers, each with their own doctors.
    Relying on good will. Thanks to a referral from a
    friend who is a pediatrician, McPhilomy was able to
    get her father into a urologist on August 15, but only
    the physician's assistant would treat him.
    Later, her father saw a gastrointestinal
    specialist for a colonoscopy, a biopsy and treatments
    for bacterial infections.
    But Sargsyan, an Armenian-born U.S. citizen, still
    hasn't seen a urologist, is still wearing a catheter,
    and his urinary problems have yet to be diagnosed.
    "How can this country deny its sickest and oldest
    citizens help? It's discrimination. It's immoral,"
    said McPhilomy.
    Data on urologists confirm McPhilomy's
    frustrations. There are 26 doctors in Utah who do
    urological surgery on Medicaid's provider rolls. In
    2006, only two billed Medicaid. In 2007, none did.
    Doctor groups and health care reformists say
    there's an easy fix: increase Medicaid reimbursement
    rates. Medicaid, which provides care to the poor, but
    also the disabled and some elderly, pays health care
    providers significantly less than Medicare and private
    insurers.
    But state health officials say it's not that
    simple.
    "You also have to factor in supply and demand,"
    said Hales. The general supply of doctors is dwindling
    as more reach retirement age and fewer graduate from
    medical school. Meanwhile, aging baby boomers feed a
    growing demand for care.
    In leaner times, "a doctor might not care so much
    about reimbursement so long as somebody is in the
    chair," said Hales. But today, "We really rely on the
    good naturedness of our doctors," he said.
    "Now it's happening." Convincing states to pour
    more money into Medicaid has gotten tougher.
    As Congress looks to reduce the federal deficit
    and wring savings from entitlement programs like
    Medicaid, more of the funding burden has fallen to
    states.
    Despite the penny-pinching climate, Utah lawmakers
    boosted Medicaid's reimbursement rates for doctors by
    2.5 percent last year. If the state realizes savings
    through a preferred drug list, doctors could get
    another 2.5 to 6 percent raise in January.
    Hales couldn't speak to the likelihood of another
    hike.
    There is no "fair market" benchmark, because costs
    vary so much, said Hales. "One dentist's office might
    run really lean, while another might think it
    necessary to have TV's in the ceiling. You could look
    at costs for 20 different offices and get 20 different
    answers."
    But advocates warn the "access problem" for
    Medicaid patients is getting worse.
    "We've been telling people for years this will
    happen, and now it's happening," said Mark
    Fotheringham, spokesman for the Utah Medical
    Association.
    Fotheringham said doctors aren't shunning their
    Medicaid clients, but refusing to take new ones.
    "Someone new to the program or the state will have
    to make a lot of phone calls before they're going to
    find somebody. And it will probably be a young doctor,
    someone who will is building a practice," said
    Fotheringham.
    The specialist is not in. Specialists are in even
    shorter supply.
    In 2007, eight specialty groups had zero Medicaid
    billings: abdominal surgeon, cardiovascular surgeon,
    geriatrician, hand surgeon, head and neck surgeon,
    neuroradiologist, pediatric radiologist and
    therapeutic radiologist.
    That means patients are going to the emergency
    room for specialty care, said Fotheringham.
    "You hope, at that point, the guy you need is
    on-call," he said. "And there are some doctors, such
    as orthopedic specialists, who won't work on-call for
    the simple reason they don't get paid."
    Lincoln Nehring, an analyst at the Utah Health
    Policy Project, said he has also started to hear of
    Medicaid patients being pushed to emergency rooms for
    primary care.
    Another common practice is for doctors to space
    their Medicaid patients, which can mean month-long
    waits, said Nehring. "We need to make sure all
    Medicaid clients have a medical home."
    [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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