| The Legislative Audit Bureau released its report on April 18, 2008 that
confirms the WDA's concerns that Medicaid patients enrolled
in health maintenance organizations in Milwaukee,
Waukesha, Racine
and Kenosha
counties have greater trouble accessing dental care than patients covered under
a straight fee-for-service program in the other 68 counties of the state.
The LAB reviewed dental care services provided under the
state’s medical assistance program in the four southeastern counties during
fiscal year 2006-07. Wisconsin
spent an estimated $46 million to provide dental services statewide to MA
recipients in 2006 with $12.3 million of those funds being paid directly to the
HMOs in the four southeastern counties.
The LAB report notes despite those payments, HMOs failed
to consistently maintain an adequate number of providers and timely access to
patients. The HMO system resulted in lower utilization of care for MA
enrollees, particularly children, and higher costs than what is provided under
the fee-for-service model that delivers dental care in the other 68 counties of
the state. The average cost per MA recipient receiving services under
fee-for-service during the audit period was $211 compared to $270 under the HMO
program.
This points to at least 25 percent, if not more, of HMO
contracted fees being spent on system administration rather than on providing
necessary dental care to MA recipients.
“This report confirms suspicions the WDA has held for
more than a decade – namely the HMO delivery model for dental MA costs the
state more money while providing less care to the patients who need it most,”
says WDA President Dr. Monica Hebl. “It is wonderful to see our concerns
confirmed by a reputable non-partisan entity like the LAB.”
The LAB also highlights an ever-growing MA population
noting that in just the last five years, overall statewide enrollment has
expanded by 15 percent with approximately 175,458 of the 750,000 MA patients
residing in the four-county HMO region.
“This report focuses on the four counties, but it is
clear the access to dental care problem is statewide due to growing numbers of
MA enrollees and plummeting reimbursement rates. Despite donating millions of
dollars of care annually through special outreach efforts and in their private
dental practices, dentists simply cannot address this problem through charity
care alone,” says Hebl.
In the news
The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel published an editorial on Tuesday, April 22, 2008 that says the HMO model of delivering dental care to MA patients in the four-county Milwaukee area isn't working and needs to be replaced.
Editorial: Junking the status quo
A new state audit confirms what some lawmakers and the Wisconsin Dental
Association have been saying for years - a vast majority of
lower-income children, especially in the Milwaukee metropolitan area,
are not receiving proper dental care.
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