Budget crisis makes Medicaid expansion even tougher sell

Republican Rep. Tom Sloan, of Lawrence, right, chairman of the House Vision 2020 Committee, conferred with the panel’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Pam Curtis, Kansas City, Kan., center, and Rep. Jarrod Ousley, a Merriam Democrat, left, after a hearing Monday on a Medicaid expansion proposal. (KHI photo by Jim McLean)
Republican Rep. Tom Sloan, of Lawrence, right, chairman of the House Vision 2020 Committee, conferred with the panel’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Pam Curtis, Kansas City, Kan., center, and Rep. Jarrod Ousley, a Merriam Democrat, left, after a hearing Monday on a Medicaid expansion proposal. (KHI photo by Jim McLean)

But House committee chair says expansion bill due out next week will include ‘financing component’

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service
Kansas’ worsening budget problems are making it harder to generate a legislative discussion about expanding Medicaid.

Rep. Tom Sloan, a moderate Republican from Lawrence, is attempting to piece together an expansion proposal that he hopes Gov. Sam Brownback and GOP conservatives might be willing to consider. He’s borrowing elements from plans crafted by conservative Republican governors in Indiana, Tennessee, Wyoming and other states that have received or are seeking federal approval for more private-sector approaches to expansion.

But adopting a more conservative approach won’t be enough, he said. With state revenues plummeting and lawmakers scrambling to close gaping holes in this and next year’s budgets, any bill also must propose to cover the state’s share of expansion costs for several years.

“If we’re going to put something on the table, there has to be a financing component,” said Sloan, who plans to start working ON? an expansion bill next week in his committee.

State revenues fell $47.2 million short of already lowered projections in January, increasing this budget year’s projected revenue shortfall to more than $325 million.

The federal government has promised to pay the full cost of a state’s Medicaid expansion through 2016 and at least 90 percent after that. A study commissioned by the Kansas Hospital Association estimated expansion would cost the state an additional $312 million through 2020.

The same study said that savings and tax revenues resulting from expansion would more than offset that cost.

“Our feeling is that this is a program that on its face funds itself,” said Tom Bell, chief executive of the hospital association.

But Sloan said even if the study is correct, the promised benefits will take time to materialize.

“Even if the advocates are right and the expansion of Medicaid, or KanCare, will result in economic growth that the state will partially capture, you still have to have the interim financing,” Sloan said. “You’ve got to match the federal dollars that will come.”

Initially, hospital association officials said they would be willing to increase an assessment on hospital revenues to pay for expansion. But in recent days Bell has said other options also should be on the table.

“We’re willing to talk about all kinds of funding sources, and that is one of them,” he said. “But that’s not the starting point. We first need to agree to have a serious discussion about expansion, and we haven’t done that yet.”

Bell said while it’s encouraging that Sloan’s committee is talking about expansion, neither Brownback nor the conservatives who control the Legislature have given any indication that they are willing to drop their opposition to it.

Any proposal that emerges from Sloan’s committee would face barriers. For one thing, it is likely to face competition. The hospitals are writing their own bill. And Rep. Dan Hawkins, the Wichita Republican who chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee, is working on what could be a third, more conservative alternative.

Kansas’ privatized Medicaid program, known as KanCare, provides insurance to nearly 370,000 needy and disabled Kansans, but it doesn’t cover able-bodied adults without children no matter how poor they are.

It’s estimated that Medicaid expansion would extend coverage to between 140,000 and 170,000 more Kansans who earn up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level: annually $16,105 for an individual and $32,913 for a family of four.

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Dodgers purchase Bianchi’s contract

The Kansas City T-Bones announced that the Los Angeles Dodgers have purchased the contract of catcher Chris Bianchi.

Bianchi, a rookie who’s 6-foot-1 and 220 pounds, batted .143 in 10 games in 2014 after signing with the T-Bones in late July.

He finished his collegiate career last spring at Trinity University, where he was selected as a member of the All-Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference team.

“We wish Chris the best of luck this spring and summer in the Dodgers system,” said T-Bones manager John Massarelli.

Bianchi is the 23rd T-Bones player whose contract has been sold to a Major League organization. The previous was pitcher Dustin Loggins, whose contract was purchased by the Arizona Diamondbacks in September 2013.

“We are in the development business, as well as trying to win games, so it is always rewarding when one of our guys gets to the next level,” said T-Bones vice president and general manager Chris Browne. “Kansas City is a great place to play and be seen by Major League scouts. We’re excited for Chris and wish him the best of luck.”
– Story from T-Bones

Orthopedic surgeon brings sports medicine expertise to Providence campus

Dr. Nick Aberle II
Dr. Nick Aberle II

Dr. Nick Aberle II, an orthopedic surgeon with expertise in sports medicine and shoulder surgery, has joined Providence Medical Group Orthopedics, on the Providence campus at 8919 Parallel Parkway, Kansas City, Kan.

Dr. Aberle said he is excited to join the new practice dedicated to serving the orthopedic needs of Wyandotte County.

“One of the things that appealed to me about Providence is that the hospital has the advanced resources necessary to perform state-of-the-art orthopedic surgery, yet has a close-knit, collegial staff,” Dr. Aberle said. “Together, we can meet the community’s needs for orthopedic care.”

A native of North Dakota, Dr. Aberle became interested in science and medicine early on.

“I decided to specialize in orthopedics because it is a wonderful blend of technology and patient care,” Dr. Aberle said. An athlete in high school, he played hockey and football, golfed, hiked and skied. “I enjoy sports medicine and helping my patients get back to the activities they love.”

Dr. Aberle earned his medical degree from the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, and performed a residency in orthopedics at the University of Nebraska, Omaha. He completed a fellowship in sports medicine and shoulder surgery with the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he served as the assistant team physician for the University of Colorado Buffalos football team, and the Denver University hockey team.

While there, he also received special training in arthroscopic shoulder surgery and shoulder joint replacement, a procedure about 53,000 people have performed each year in the United States.

“Between aging baby boomers and the rising incidence of shoulder injuries in young athletes, there is an increasing demand for shoulder surgery,” Dr. Aberle said. He is a candidate for the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgery and the American Society for Sports Medicine.

Dr. Aberle is practicing with Dr. Timothy J. Monahan. Dr. Monahan is a board-certified orthopedic surgeon with a subspecialty certificate in sports medicine. He currently serves as the team doctor for William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. During a sports medicine fellowship, he also has assisted the University of Pittsburgh physicians with coverage of the Pittsburgh Penguins and junior hockey teams.

Dr. Monahan completed medical school at the Medical College of Virginia; completed a residency with Geisinger Medical Center; and completed a sports medicine and arthroscopic fellowship at Orthopaedic Research of Virginia.

Dr. Aberle and his family are relocating to the Kansas City area. They enjoy outdoor activities including biking, golfing and skiing.
His office is located on the Providence Medical Center campus at 8919 Parallel Parkway, Suite 360. His office telephone number is 913-596-3940.

– Story from Providence Medical Center