Rerun - I'd add cutting the social worker's pay for visits once a month while on dialysis also. The one I had the last three years was useless. And dietitians, too. No help there at all for me. Maybe the rest of you had better luck.
Don't be surprised if you see two mass migrations after Obamacare’s major provisions - as they stand now - go into effect in 2014. First, states that adopt the expanded Medicaid entitlements will become magnets for low-income people. Many will choose to move to states where they can get “free” healthcare. Second, doctors and healthcare providers will flock to states that resist big-government programs, since doctors will be free there to practice medicine as they know best, without bureaucratic controls. So “Obamacare states” will see a growing shortage of doctors, while free-market states will see an increasing abundance of doctors. This trend will probably accelerate if the states not participating also enact medical tort reform.
There is no winners and losers.
At this point in time, all comments/analysis can be considered speculation. However, what is fact, twenty-something states are not going to participate in the extended Medicaid program and/or develop their own exchanges. It will not be business as usual.Comparing your state's program to Obamacare is like comparing apples to oranges. I don't believe it involved 2700 pages of regulations and requirements as well as federal level interventions.
Quote from: PatDowns on November 23, 2012, 12:34:46 PMDon't be surprised if you see two mass migrations after Obamacare’s major provisions - as they stand now - go into effect in 2014. First, states that adopt the expanded Medicaid entitlements will become magnets for low-income people. Many will choose to move to states where they can get “free” healthcare. Second, doctors and healthcare providers will flock to states that resist big-government programs, since doctors will be free there to practice medicine as they know best, without bureaucratic controls. So “Obamacare states” will see a growing shortage of doctors, while free-market states will see an increasing abundance of doctors. This trend will probably accelerate if the states not participating also enact medical tort reform.This is funny too. You're predicting that as patients move out of states, physicians will move in, that is counter to basic economics. In any case if a doctor doesn't want to accept Medicaid rates they don't have to accept Medicaid patients, no reason to move to a state where people are uninsured to avoid treating them.In general the several states of the old confederacy that have said they will not expand Medicaid have terrible Medicaid/health insurance now yet I am not aware of a vast migration for health benefits. After 2014 there will still be today's residency requirements for Medicaid.
Thanks for reposting the "handy up to date" map that Patdowns posted before you. And, I will stand by my comment of fact that 20 states have decided at this time to either not participate in the extended Medicaid Program and/or develop their own exchanges.From the map Patdowns posted, 8 states are not participating in the extended Medicaid program w/5 leaning that way. Here's an up to date map from Kaiser Family Foundation showing how states are breaking towards forming their own exchanges (including source of decision). - http://statehealthfacts.kff.org/comparemaptable.jsp?ind=962&cat=17 16 have decided to default to the feds. Therefore 8+16=24 - I won't even count the 5 leaning states.As far as going w/the interests of its citizens, these states are. They realize it (extended Medicaid) will cost them huge amounts of money long-term and do not want to tax citizens any further or commit their states to unsustainable financial obligations . Unlike the federal govt., states can't print money. Those are facts.The main reasons given by most governors who do not want to set up state exchanges? The Obama administration has been slow to release details about how exchanges should operate and complained that the law has proved too inflexible to meet the needs of individual states. Funny, exactly opposite of what you say why they will end up participating. Now, if the administration will make changes the states can live with, of course they will reconsider.
I said low income people - not patients - would move to states with lower threshhold requirements for extended medicaid entitlements. We already see illegal alien migration away from states with tougher immigration laws. Why expect less in this scenario?And, yes, physicians, especially those just starting practices with huge loans to repay, are going to consider setting up private practices in states with less governmental interventions or stay longer with teaching schools.You do not know what the requirements are going to be for medicaid - excuse me, extended medicaid benefits - since the feds are setting the rules and regs. One reason states don't want to participate, plus the Obama administration hasn't even been forthcoming on what these rules/regs will be! You know, Bill, you don't need to be sarcastic with your responses. I started my post with "don't be surprised if..." You have no better handle on what's going to happen down the road than me or anyone else who posts an opinion on here. If you did, then we dialysis patients would already be experiencing better medical care due to your expertise and insider influence.
I was listening to a radio program on NPR today. In some states, they said LA, eligibility for Medicaid is 15% of federal poverty level. That's appalling! You can only get Medicaid if you earn less than about $2500/year. We in America treat out poor horribly.
Quote from: PatDowns on November 24, 2012, 09:00:48 PMI said low income people - not patients - would move to states with lower threshhold requirements for extended medicaid entitlements. We already see illegal alien migration away from states with tougher immigration laws. Why expect less in this scenario?And, yes, physicians, especially those just starting practices with huge loans to repay, are going to consider setting up private practices in states with less governmental interventions or stay longer with teaching schools.You do not know what the requirements are going to be for medicaid - excuse me, extended medicaid benefits - since the feds are setting the rules and regs. One reason states don't want to participate, plus the Obama administration hasn't even been forthcoming on what these rules/regs will be! You know, Bill, you don't need to be sarcastic with your responses. I started my post with "don't be surprised if..." You have no better handle on what's going to happen down the road than me or anyone else who posts an opinion on here. If you did, then we dialysis patients would already be experiencing better medical care due to your expertise and insider influence.To doctors those low income people are patients, so were talking about the same people - right now today, and it has been true my entire life, people can move to a different state and gain access to health insurance that they don't have access to in their home states. This has been true my entire life but I haven't heard about the disenfranchised poor of Mississippi moving to California or New York, why would it suddenly happen after 2014? There will still be residency requirements for Medicaid in 2014, just as there are today. Ask someone who is using dialysis and insured by Medicaid how easy it is to move to a new state. This idea that physicians will go Galt because of Obamacare is funny because basic economic theory, that even objectivists believe, is supply follows demand. There will be more people with insurance, which means doctors will have a bigger customer base, in every state. And if a doctor doesn't want to accept Medicaid rates they don't have to accept Medicaid patients, they have no reason to move to another state where people are uninsured. If a doctor doesn't want to treat patients insured under expanded Medicaid then she does not have to treat them, she can choose to treat only those with private insurance. The market will adjust.What I am describing is what is the current law. I don't think I am making a prediction beyond stating the obvious - Obamacare is a big win for people with CKD. That said I think Simon Dog has a point that if more people have access to a transplant, there will be more people on the transplant list, and therefor the wait will be longer than it would be otherwise. That is a dynamic that will probably play out but it isn't a good reason to oppose expanding access to health insurance.
My complaint against Obamacare is changing the whole system when 80%-85% of Americans were happy.
You know, Bill, you don't need to be sarcastic with your responses. I started my post with "don't be surprised if..." You have no better handle on what's going to happen down the road than me or anyone else who posts an opinion on here. If you did, then we dialysis patients would already be experiencing better medical care due to your expertise and insider influence.