Guest guest Posted March 2, 2005 Report Share Posted March 2, 2005 Next year will be a very tough budget year. The Bush budget will cut over 2 billion dollars out of Pa. Medicaid system. The current govenor in Pa wants to place co-pays for parents of children with disabilities and now see below (most issues are adult but still cause for concern)...Let them hear from you, if not services will suffer.... Persons with Disabilities, their families and friends From: Pennsylvania Protection & Advocacy & Disabilities Law Project Re: PENNSYLVANIA'S PROPOSED MEDICAID CUTS TARGET PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES Governor Rendell's proposed budget includes major changes to Medicaid that, if implemented, will place people with disabilities in serious jeopardy. While DPW has given its assurances that 80% of the population will be unaffected by these cuts, it is people with disabilities and chronic health conditions that will shoulder the burden of these cuts. There is little doubt that as a result of these cuts, people will go untreated. If adopted, these cuts would make Pennsylvania's hospital coverage among the worst in the country. The proposed changes include: .. Adult in-patient hospital stays will be limited to two per year for most; only 1 per year for some others ( " GA " category). .. Adult in-patient rehabilitation stays will be limited to one per year. .. Adult out-patient visits to professionals will be limited to 18 per year. This includes physicians, chiropractors, optometrists, and podiatrists. We also understand that this cap may include physical, occupational, and speech therapy visits. .. Adults will be allowed a total of $5,000 worth of durable medical equipment (such as wheelchairs and augmentative communication devices) per year. .. Adults will be allowed no more than six prescriptions per month, for most; only 3 per month for some others ( " GA " category)regardless of whether the prescriptions relate to physical or mental health issues. .. Adult mental health benefits in the fee-for-service areas will be cut -- from 60 to 30 in-patient hospital days per benefit period; from 720 to 540 hours of partial hospitalization per benefit period; and from 7 to 5 out- patient visits per month. .. Parents of youngsters with disabilities will be charged significant premiums for Medicaid services if their incomes exceed $40,000 per year. .. Co-payments will be imposed for more services and significantly increased for other services. State officials, forced to defend these horrendous limits on Medicaid, have attempted to downplay the significance of these cuts. Officials have said that the limits on medical care only affect discretionary care and not " emergent " (emergency) care. But what that means is that if a person has used up two hospital visits, he can go to an emergency room for stabilization but will not be admitted to the hospital for treatment. Officials have indicated that some exception process will be developed. But such a process likely would be inadequate to protect persons with disabilities who are most at risk of harm, in part because any exceptions process will require already overburdened physicians to take time away from treating their patients to fill out paper work or make phone calls to justify to some state bureaucrat the care they believe their patients need. Most importantly, many medically necessary benefits will still be denied. Coverage under Medical Assistance is already limited to medically necessary services. In order to realize the cost savings projected from these cuts, many exception requests for medically necessary services will have to be denied. Medically necessary heath care should not be an exception! There is still time to stop these changes. The Pennsylvania Legislature must approve the cuts, in principle, for them to go into effect. It is critical for consumers, families, and advocates to make their voices heard by contacting their local state representatives and senators, and the media. Let them know that these Medicaid cuts will severely harm persons with disabilities and that the human costs for people with disabilities are not worth any cost-savings DPW claims it will get. Please share this Alert with others and encourage them to express their opposition to these proposed Medicaid changes. We need to use every opportunity to fight these changes. On March 7th PP & A will be cosponsoring a briefing on these cuts with the PA Health Law Project. The briefing will take place at 10:30 in PP & A's conference room at 1414 N. Cameron St, burg. For more information contact the Health Law Project at 717-236-6310. Following our briefing on March 7th, you are invited to attend an important hearing on these cuts held by the State Senate Appropriations Committee. The hearing will start at 1:15 pm and will be held in the Majority Caucus room in the Main Capitol. The State House Appropriations Committee will also hold a hearing on these cuts on March 9 at 2 pm in Room 140, Main Capitol. You are encouraged to contact members of the appropriations committees with your concerns. Come to the hearings and use the opportunity to talk to the media about how these cuts will affect people with disabilities. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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