[nfbwatlk] FYI: Vancouver Columbian 1-31-12 Local health firm loses state pact
Mike Freeman
k7uij at panix.com
Thu Feb 2 03:00:13 UTC 2012
Wow! What a SNAFU!
Mike
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From: nfbwatlk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nfbwatlk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Nightingale, Noel
Sent: Wednesday, February 01, 2012 8:51 AM
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Subject: [nfbwatlk] FYI: Vancouver Columbian 1-31-12 Local health firm loses
state pact
From: Olson, Toby (ESD) [mailto:TOlson2 at ESD.WA.GOV]
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 9:51 AM
To: GCDE-INFO at LISTSERV.WA.GOV
Subject: FW: FYI: Vancouver Columbian 1-31-12 Local health firm loses state
pact
From: Stevenson, Jim (HCA)
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 9:35 AM
Subject: FYI: Vancouver Columbian 1-31-12 Local health firm loses state pact
Local health firm loses state pact
47,000 Medicaid patients affected; 80 workers could lose jobs
By Marissa Harshman<http://www.columbian.com/staff/marissa-harshman/>
Columbian Staff Reporter
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
About 47,000 Medicaid patients in Clark County may soon be forced to find
new doctors. But so far, patients have no reassurance there will be enough
local physicians willing to serve them.
The state Health Care Authority, which oversees seven health programs, has
selected five health insurance plans that appear to have successfully bid to
provide Medicaid services to Washington residents. The selected insurance
plans will manage care for the state's Healthy Options and Basic Health
members, who are mostly women and children.
Columbia United Providers, a Vancouver-based group which currently provides
the health plans, was not selected. CUP has filed a formal protest to the
decision. The contracts are set to be finalized Feb. 29 and will be in
effect from July 1, 2012 to Dec. 31, 2013.
If the decision stands, the local CUP members will have to select new health
insurance plans and, in most cases, new primary care physicians. The
decision would also leave the 80 workers at CUP unemployed.
CUP is a community-based health insurance plan owned by PeaceHealth
Southwest Medical Center and other Clark County health care providers. The
group has managed the health care for local Medicaid patients since 1994.
The five plans recently selected by the state are Amerigroup, Community
Health Plan of Washington, Coordinated Care Corp., Molina Healthcare of
Washington and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan.
Amerigroup and UnitedHealthcare are Fortune 500 companies and Coordinated
Care Corp. is a subsidiary of Centene, another Fortune 500 company.
Molina Healthcare is a for-profit company based in Long Beach, Calif., and
provides health care services to 4.3 million people in 16 states. Community
Health Plan is a Washington-based nonprofit group founded by a network of
community and migrant health centers in the state.
CUP officials fear the state's bidding process may represent a fundamental
change in the values of the state's managed Medicaid program.
"If the state's remaining program consists primarily of multistate, large
plans, Washington's opportunity to collaborate with locally focused health
plans to innovate on health system efficiencies and improve quality will be
severely curtailed," said Ann Wheelock, CUP chief executive officer.
The state decision has also sparked concern among CUP members and
physicians.
About 170 Clark County primary care providers contract with CUP, in addition
to specialists, pharmacies, hospitals and other medical service providers.
That accounts for about 95 percent of non-Kaiser physicians in the county,
said Cindy Orth, vice president for external affairs at CUP.
Many local private physicians and physician groups are not currently
contracted with the other health plans, raising questions about who will
care for Medicaid patients if CUP is gone, Orth said.
Dr. Susan Hughes, a family medicine doctor with the Family Wellness Center,
said she doesn't believe the out-of-state plans have the capabilities to
care for local patients.
"They may have approval from the state to move forward, but they don't have
a panel to deliver, and CUP does," she said.
The Health Care Authority required that bidders have an "adequate provider
network," said Jim Stevenson, spokesman for the Health Care Authority.
However, it's unclear whether they were required to have those networks
established before submitting a bid. Stevenson said he could not provide
additional comment about provider networks because contracts are not final.
Molina and Community Health Plan both currently provide services in
Washington, including Clark County. Molina, according to its website, has 28
contracted primary care providers in Clark County. Community Health Plan has
13, according to its website.
A Centene spokeswoman said she could not comment about its provider network
since the contract process is ongoing. Amerigroup Washington chief executive
officer Maureen McLaughlin said in a written statement that the company has
been building relationships with providers for the past 18 months but didn't
provide additional details.
UnitedHealthcare did not respond to The Columbian request for comment on its
provider networks.
Better reimbursement
The Health Care Authority selected the successful bidders based on several
factors, including cost, access and quality. The most heavily weighted
factor was cost, which appeared to bump CUP out of the running since it
reimburses its physicians at a higher rate than the state average.
The authority set target reimbursement rates for each region in the state
based on historical data and assumptions about future cost reductions and
increases. The bid request also gave a cost range for bids. For most
regions, the range for Healthy Options services was from 3 percent above to
3 percent below the target rate, Wheelock said.
But not Clark County. Clark County was not grouped with other counties, and
the local range was from 3 percent above the target rate to 12 percent
below, she said.
"The state was essentially inviting other plans to come in and low-ball the
bid," Wheelock said.
The Health Care Authority's bid request said it thought there could be
significant cost savings in Clark County, chiefly from physician
reimbursement, Orth said.
"One of our concerns is they singled out Clark County for this bid process,"
Orth said.
Primarily, she said, it's because CUP reimburses physicians at a rate higher
than the state average.
The state uses conversion factors to determine reimbursement rates. Each
specific service has a weight code. That code is multiplied by the
conversion factor to get a reimbursement amount.
CUP uses a higher conversion factor for most services. For example, the
state conversion factor for maternity services, as set by the Health Care
Authority, is $37.40. CUP has a conversion factor of $44.88. The private
insurers use a conversion factor of $65 to $80.
CUP officials said its higher rate is necessary in order to get private
practitioners to take on low-income patients.
"We paid higher than the Medicaid rate because we had to buy access," said
Dr. Lisa Morrison, CUP medical director.
In Clark County, Kaiser Permanente is a provider of health care services for
a significant portion of the privately insured population. Kaiser serves few
low-income, state-insured patients. That means the rest of the providers in
the community have to balance state-insured patients with the remaining
privately insured patients, Morrison said.
Dr. Colleen Fox, an obstetrician for PeaceHealth Medical Group, used to work
in private practice for 12 years. The higher reimbursement rates are what
allow the providers to keep their businesses running, she said.
"It's really a way that we can still provide good health for the community
and still keep our lights on," Fox said.
Clark County is also unique because it has only one Federally Qualified
Health Center, the SeaMar clinics. In other communities, those clinics,
which receive state and federal subsidies, contract with health plans to
serve a greater portion of the state-insured population. But SeaMar doesn't
have the capacity to serve the 47,000 local Medicaid patients, which means
CUP has to contract with private providers.
The Health Care Authority hoped the bidding process would lower costs and
help save the state money.
The changes may save the state money in the short-term, Wheelock said, but
they are also pulling apart a local network that has been built over the
past two decades.
Stevenson, with the Health Care Authority, said it's too early to know how
much money the state will save by switching health plan providers.
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