Category Archives: Medicaid expansion

Health Reform and Coverage during Pregnancy

An Independent’s Guide to the Iowa Legislators’ Election:
Pregnant Women without Health Care Coverage
– A New York Times Exposé Waiting to Happen

“What Killed Harmon Ball-Stribling?” is a New York Times article from Aug. 11, 2024, that details the death of a Mississippi Delta pregnant woman who “lived in a rural health care ‘desert,’ a county with no obstetrician or certified nurse midwife and no hospital that delivered babies.” She had health insurance. “Her story is a case study of how powerful social, economic and environmental forces conspire” against women like her.

Next year in Iowa, an estimated 1,270 uninsured women with incomes between $32,500 and $56,250 (215% to 375% of the federal poverty level) will become pregnant and will not be able to obtain health-care coverage via Medicaid or privately. (Private insurance via the federal Health Insurance Marketplace will not be available for them until January 2026.)

This new development occurs because an Iowa law passed and signed this spring, which expanded Medicaid coverage for women from three months to 12 months postpartum, also disqualified newly pregnant women within the above income levels from obtaining coverage through Medicaid. Unfortunately, these women do not qualify for early enrollment in the Marketplace’s insurance plans, as pregnancy is not a “qualifying life event.”

These women have no safety net. The Iowa Division of Insurance has told insurance agents that the is no provision for early insurance issuance, and the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services has twice told me that there is no governmental option for health-care coverage for these women.

The United States has the highest maternal mortality rate despite the most health-care spending. Over 80% of these deaths are likely preventable. Women who do not receive prenatal care are three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications. Infants born to mothers who do not receive prenatal care are three times more likely to have a low birth rate and five times more likely to die in infancy. It is only logical that newly pregnant women without health-care coverage will be at increased risk of morbidity and mortality due to aggravated mental illness, given that “mental health is the leading cause of death of pregnant women and new mothers in the United States,” according to a JAMA Psychiatry’s Special Communication and confirmed by Iowa Department of Health and Human Services staff.

The perfect storm is completed by the ongoing progression of obstetrical deserts in rural Iowa. Denison and Newton gave up obstetrical services in their cities in the last two months.

This set of circumstances occur at a time when Gov. Kim Reynolds in her 2024 State of the State Address to the Iowa Legislature said, “To continue building a robust culture of life, we must also do everything in our power to ensure new moms and their families – especially those who are struggling – have what they need to make ends meet.” She also said, “Let’s do more to help moms, babies and their families get off to a good start.”

Similarly, Iowa Department of Health & Human Services Director Kelly Garcia said on an Iowa PBS program, “All day, every day, Erin. That’s our job. We work with Iowans who need to navigate the eligibility (health-care coverage) process every day.”

How do we solve this situation? Six options, at least, have been determined:

  1. Make pregnancy a qualifying life event for purposes of the federal Health Insurance Marketplace, allowing early health insurance access by federal rule.
  2. Make pregnancy a qualifying life event for purposes of the federal Health Insurance Marketplace, allowing early health insurance access by federal law.
  3. Return Medicaid eligibility to pregnant women in this income category.
  4. Make Iowa a state-based Exchange and then make pregnancy a qualifying life event for purposes of allowing early health-insurance access.
  5. Expand Iowa’s Children Health Insurance Program (HAWK-I) to include this set of pregnant women. (Six states enroll pregnant women in CHIP-funded coverage.)
  6. Expand HAWK-I to cover unborn children. (Fifteen states, including Minnesota and California, provide separate CHIP coverage to approximately 327,000 unborn children.)

At a Sept. 20 meeting, Iowa Department of Health & Human Services staff indicated that they had no options available to their department to help these women except to encourage “all Iowans to secure health-insurance coverage ahead of any health-related issue.” Department staff said it required a legislative “fix.”

Given that the Iowa Department of Health & Human Services recommended that interested Iowans turn this issue over to the Iowa Legislature, and as an avowed independent voter in Iowa who believes that the Legislature serves the will of the electorate, I believe every state legislative candidate in Iowa should be asked at meet and greets, candidate forums, editorial board meetings and debates how he or she would pursue solving this problem quickly to prevent harm to these 1,270 women and their 1,270 unborn children.

If such a question is asked and answered, please communicate that response to your friends, family and other Iowans. Let’s help Iowa avoid harm to our fellow citizens and avoid a New York Times exposé. Remember that Harmony Ball-Stribling had health insurance; these women will not.

Health Reform and a Primer for Democratic Presidential Candidates in Iowa

What every presidential Democratic candidate many of whom will be speaking at the Iowa State Fair this week should know about Iowa health reform:

1. Iowa suffered greatly by having a Republican-dominated state government (governor, Senate, and House) during the aftermath of the enactment of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). With a Republican governor and most recently a Republican Senate and House in Iowa, we had a miserable attempt at a Marketplace/Exchange; no support for our attempt at a health-care Co-Op (Co-Oportunity Health, which had 120,000 members in one year of operation); passage of association health plans, which allow for discrimination against persons with co-existing conditions; and, overall, an unbelievably negative atmosphere in general regarding anything that concerned the ACA.

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Health Reform and Why Words Should Matter

Ah, words! Especially to writers, they are more precious than jewels, as essential as air, and powerful enough to create entire worlds. We chase them, massage or mince them, we roll them around in our mouths, savoring every delicious subtlety. Mostly, we love them.

~Tammy Letherer

Ms. Letherer wrote these words on a blog entry titled Why Words Matter (In and Out of the Locker Room), on October 16, 2016.  In that post, she discussed her unhappiness with Donald Trump’s language regarding women.

In Iowa, former U.S. Representative Bruce Braley lost his Senate race with Joni Ernst in large part to an audiotape of his words to political contributors in Texas disparaging our senior senator, Chuck Grassley, describing him as “a farmer from Iowa who never went to law school.”

This year’s health-care debate, centered on the Republicans’ efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA), has led to many statements by Republican leaders in Iowa that should come back to haunt them this Halloween season and for seasons to come, as Bruce Braley’s words haunted him.

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Health Reform and Spudnutz

I stood in line at 6:45 Sunday morning to purchase donuts at a very popular local donut shop — Spudnutz — at Lake Okoboji. The line of donut-seekers stretched far out the door. I did not receive donuts until 7:50 a.m. I waited more than an hour for donuts. (Yes, very good donuts). Nine people were working in that donut shop that once housed an auto mechanic shop.

If either the Senate bill or the House bill that was intended to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) became law, I fear none of those nine hardworking people would have health-care coverage in the future. For many of my patients and for, I believe, the employees of Spudnutz, I give thanks for the defeat of the Senate “skinny” repeal legislation.

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Health Reform and Medicare for All … Seniors

One of my favorite movies is White Christmas, which starred Bing Crosby and Rose Mary Clooney. In one scene, Rose Mary Clooney’s character sings a song in a nightclub about her unhappiness with Bing Crosby’s character. She sings, “Love, you didn’t do right by me … you planned romance that just hadn’t a chance, and I am through.”

In a fashion similar to that Irving Berlin song, after years of touting private health insurance by helping to create the Healthy and Well Kids in Iowa (HAWK-I) — Iowa’s CHIP program, and working with CoOportunity Health — Iowa’s health-care co-op that went bankrupt, I have come to the conclusion that the private health-insurance market under the Affordable Care Act (known as the ACA or Obamacare) has not done “right by me.” More importantly, it has not “done right”  the citizens of the country. For reasons that I will clarify later, I now support expanding Medicare to individuals 55 years of age in a graduated, voluntary enrollment process.

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Health Reform and CoOportunity Health

It is with sadness that I acknowledge the takeover of the cooperative health-insurance company, CoOportunity Health, by the Iowa insurance commissioner. I have touted CoOportunity Health many times in this blog, and I have strongly felt it was a critical part of the current health-reform efforts in Iowa. My sadness is even greater for the 100,000 individuals who had insurance with CoOportunity Health. These individuals’ confidence and coverage are jeopardized because of this action. The health and peace of mind of friends, family, and patients who I know are insured by CoOportunity Health are a major concern for me at this time.

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Health Reform and Drugs, Drugs, Drugs

The good news. On Wednesday, November 19, CoOportunity Health, the Iowa-Nebraska health-care-cooperative insurance entity that I have touted in several blog posts, insured its 100,000th person for health-care coverage. As I have said before, its projection for the end of this year, its first year of operation, was 15,000 policyholders.

The bad news. CoOportunity Health announced that next year, 2015, it would not participate in the Iowa Medicaid expansion for individuals whose incomes were between 100 to 133 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL). CoOportunity Health simply could not sustain the financial losses for this group of 11,000 Iowans. From my non-insurance and non-actuarial level of understanding, the major issues were 1) the federal government being unwilling to allow for a separate, more accurate actuarial premium amount for this population of newly insured individuals and instead requiring this population to be part of the entire population’s actuarial projection of CoOportunity Health’s premium holders, and 2) the high cost of drugs for treatment of diseases such as Hepatitis C and HIV. For now, this group of individuals will be part of the Medicaid program instead of utilizing the Exchange and being part of the private insurance system.

In this post I’ll discuss several incidents of how the high cost of medicines has negatively affected my patients and the health-care system. The question is: Can health reform, or for that matter the health-care system, survive the upward trajectory of the price of medications?

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Health Reform and the 2014 Iowa Senate Race

I ask the few remaining independent voters — those who have not yet decided for whom they will vote in the U.S. Senate race between Iowa State Senator Joni Ernst and U.S. Congressman Bruce Braley — to give me two minutes of your time.

I am Dave Carlyle, a family physician and hospice medical director from Ames. I grew up in Denison. This is where, during my summers home from college, I learned the value of hard work by sweating 10 hours a day at the Iowa Beef Packers slaughterhouse. After medical school at the University of Iowa and family-medicine residency in Waterloo, I practiced nine and a half years in Kossuth County. I have now practiced 21 years in Ames. My family has been serving Iowans for 160 years. My two daughters, both of whom are physicians, also care for Iowans.

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