patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Medicaid

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Medicaid Expansion Could Save State More Than $6 Billion Over Next Nine Years

New report from New Jersey think tank fails to find downside to increasing Medicaid coverage.

New Jersey would save more than $6 billion in healthcare spending over the next nine years, if Gov. Chris Christie opts to expand Medicaid eligibility, according to a report released by a think tank Thursday. New Jersey Policy Perspective calculated that the state would accrue the savings because the federal government would be picking up the tab for both new and current participants in two Medicaid programs. The first, General Assistance, covers childless adults with less than $2,520 a year in income. The state pays 50 percent of the medical costs for 40,000 participants in this program. The second, FamilyCare, is meant for poor adults and their dependent children. To qualify, a family of four must earn no more than $30,725 a year. The …

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Legislators Propose Tax Credits Up to $675 for At-Home Caregivers

But GOP lawmakers question how to pay for program to help families with cost of aiding elderly.

Caregivers struggling with the cost of aiding older relatives would receive tax relief under a bill that is advancing in the Legislature. The bill, AA-3404, would provide up to $675 in tax credits for individuals and couples who provide care for a family member who is at least 60 years old and lives in the home of the caregiver. A Medicaid waiver the state received last year aims to encourage more seniors to live at home longer and stay out of nursing homes. But there is concern that there will be fewer at-home caregivers available, since insurance companies are reducing reimbursement rates for them. As a result, more families are expected to have to provide care themselves for their elderly relatives. The tax credit would help ease some …

Jake

7:26 am on Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Why not a tax break for all of the people in New Jersey?   more ›

Monday, November 26, 2012

Medicaid Expansion Supporters Build Case on Potential Savings

Senate panel urges Christie to increase eligibility for low-income program.

Advocates for expanding eligibility for Medicaid in New Jersey are attempting to make their case in financial terms, but it remains to be seen whether they’ve developed enough evidence to convince a skeptical Gov. Chris Christie. Several policy experts endorsed a resolution that was advanced by the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee on Monday that urged Christie to support the expansion. Committee Chairman Sen. Joseph Vitale (D-Middlesex) sponsored the resolution. Ray Castro, senior policy analyst for New Jersey Policy Perspective, said the expansion is “financially a great deal” because the federal government would cover the entire cost of the expansion for the first three years, before the state share would …

Jake

7:52 am on Monday, November 26, 2012

The feds will pay for the first and then the people of new jersey will have to pick up the tab. Sounds like when the state said they would pick up free lunches for the "poor" kids(where are there parents) and then after two years the local municipalities would have to foo the bill. Say no to this idea. No more taxes of any kind.   more ›

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Decision to Expand Medicaid Coverage in New Jersey is Christie's Call

Whether the state can afford to extend Medicaid to adults without dependent children depends on who's doing the math.

While the future of the Affordable Care Act seems brighter with the re-election of President Barack Obama, the same can't be said for one of its provisions -- Medicaid expansion -- at least not in New Jersey, where Gov. Chris Christie casts his shadow over its prospects. The governor has already expressed his skepticism about expanding the program, citing its impact on the state's already overburdened budget. Ultimately, his decision will determine the number of New Jersey residents who are eligible for Medicaid. The ACA lets states decide for themselves whether to take advantage of federal funds to increase the size of their Medicaid rolls. Given New Jersey's divided legislature, the call is Christie's: will the state accept Medicaid …

Carly EngageAmerica

3:22 pm on Monday, November 26, 2012

The reelection of President Obama provides a clear passage for health care reform. However, this massive top-down reform comes with major structural flaws. The ACA promises what it cannot deliver. The reform increases demand while the supply of health care services remains stagnant.   more ›

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Bill Aims to Block HMO Cuts in Medicaid Reimbursements

Senate panel hears emotional testimony on potential harm to children, elderly and disabled.

A state Senate committee has moved to set up roadblocks in the face of reimbursement cuts planned by HMOs that oversee New Jersey’s Medicaid program. Often-emotional testimony by health-care providers and workers helped convince the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee that cuts by Horizon NJ Health and the other HMOs would hit services for the frail elderly, children with disabilities and other vulnerable populations. The committee already was inclined to act as its chairman, Sen. Joseph Vitale (D-Middlesex) sponsored legislation -- S2241 -- with Sen. Loretta Weinberg (D-Bergen) to require state administrative approval before the HMOs can lower reimbursements. Weinberg declared that the issue is of “increasing …

Friday, February 10, 2012

Wired MD: NJ Plugs Into Funding to Digitize Patient Records

Medicaid providing $40 million to entice initial investments in electronic medical records

New Jersey announced a milestone Thursday in the long journey to convert the state’s hospitals and physicians to electronic medical records: Nearly $40 million in federal incentive funds is flowing this week from Medicaid to the first 70 healthcare providers in New Jersey to go digital. Over the next decade, state officials estimated that 3,000 providers would receive up to $500 million in Medicaid incentive payments to help defray the cost of installing the computers and software that will maintain patient records -- prescription medications, lab tests, exams, surgery -- in digital files that ultimately will be accessible via the Internet, anywhere in the world. That sounds like a lot of money, but Colleen Woods, who heads the state …

Got a Hot Tip?