The first domino

by Prometheus 6
November 20, 2004 - 12:23pm.
on Economics | Health | Politics
Quote of note:
"In this country, rich as it is, people shouldn't have to choose whether their child will live or die," said Angela Ray, the mother of a severely ill 12-year-old girl in Lawrenceburg. "It's amazing to me that it's come down to this."
Once a Model, a Health Plan Is Endangered By RICK LYMAN NASHVILLE, Nov. 19 - A decade after Tennessee inaugurated a health care plan for the state's most vulnerable residents that was hailed as a model for the nation, the program is once more being held up as a model - of failure in an era of soaring medical costs and voters' aversion to higher taxes. Today the plan, TennCare, which sought to improve health care for Medicaid recipients while covering those who fall through the federal program's cracks, is on the ropes. Gov. Phil Bredesen, a conservative Democrat and former health maintenance organization entrepreneur, has threatened the program with extinction, saying that rising costs and generous benefits - TennCare consumes nearly a third of the state's $25 billion budget - make it unaffordable unless it can be radically restructured to save money and limit benefits. In the coming year alone, the program faces a potential deficit of $650 million. After more than a week of tense negotiations between the governor and advocates for TennCare's 1.3 million users - nearly a quarter of the state's population, including an estimated 430,000 who would not be covered by Medicaid if TennCare disappeared - the two sides decided to "step back from the brink," as Mr. Bredesen put it. "Before I go down the road of taking 430,000 people off the rolls - more specifically, before I can face even one of them, individually, and tell them that it is over, that I can no longer help - I need to be clear in my own heart that I've done everything that I know how to do to solve this," the governor said.

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