Election 2016 FAQ: Proposition 52, Private Hospital Fees For Medi-Cal

http://www.capradio.org/articles/2016/10/03/election-2016-faq-proposition-52,-private-hospital-fees-for-medi-cal/?utm_campaign=CHL%3A+Daily+Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=35302967&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8_y7tr7hjKlocU1Bf0RP6qo8AOsaLKyNwYTxsS4ZJy4709jXXIbWZfW2Fcz8YjL39HJrT6rBSjniGZ4BrgqygFdZHHFA&_hsmi=35302967

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The Basics

In California, private hospitals pay an annual fee to the state that in turn helps bring in additional federal funds for Medi-Cal, the state’s health care program for low-income Californians. One in three Californians get their health care through Medi-Cal. The funds generated by the fee cover hospital services for Medi-Cal patients and health care for low-income children.

Hospitals originally approached the Legislature to create the “Hospital Quality Assurance Fee,” which state lawmakers enacted in 2009. This law is slated to expire in 2018. Proposition 52 would make the fee permanent and would make it tougher for the Legislature to use the money for other purposes.

The federal government matches state spending on health care for the poor, so the more California puts up for Medi-Cal, the more federal dollars it receives. The hospital fee boosts the state’s fund for Medi-Cal and thus attracts more federal money. Those dollars are then paid back to the hospitals to reimburse them for caring for their Medi-Cal patients.

What you’re voting on

Hospitals say the fee system is crucial to California’s medical safety net. They say they spend more to treat Medi-Cal patients than government reimbursement covers. The supplemental federal money hospitals get helps shrink their deficits. The estimated net benefit to hospitals in 2015-2016 was $3.5 billion.

Hospitals also contribute around $1 billion annually for children’s health care. This extra money acts like a handling fee that hospitals pay the state so the Legislature partners with them on Medi-Cal matching funds. Hospitals want to cement this law rather than have it re-upped every few years to avoid uncertainty and to make sure the amount of the extra fee for children’s health care doesn’t continue to increase, as it has in years past.

Proposition 52 requires a two-thirds vote in the state Legislature to end the program or to divert money from the hospital fee away from Medi-Cal. That’s something that lawmakers did in 2011, when they used approximately half a billion dollars for other purposes.

Hospital Finance Measure On California Ballot May Stump Voters

http://khn.org/news/hospital-finance-measure-on-california-ballot-may-stump-voters/

Voting booths at Hermosa Beach City Hall during California Primary

California voters will be asked to weigh in this November on a hospital financing measure so politically and financially complicated that they might be tempted to avoid it altogether.

The initiative, Proposition 52, would make permanent the “Hospital Quality Assurance Fee,” which the state collects from private hospitals to bring in additional federal dollars for Medi-Cal, California’s version of the federal Medicaid health care program for the poor. The federal government matches money that California puts up to fund Medi-Cal services.

The dollars generated by the fee are used to fund hospital services and children’s health care under Medi-Cal, and the ballot measure would help ensure the money is not diverted by lawmakers for other uses.

Hospitals like the fee, which has been in place since 2009, because it gives them a big financial boost in what they say is an underfunded government health program. In the 2015-2016 fiscal year, hospitals received an additional $3.5 billion to pay for services they provided to Medi-Cal patients, according to the state Legislative Analyst’s Office.