ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)– The politics of health care reform is costing workers their jobs and patients their care.
Jamie Fisher, six-month-old Cannan, and seven-year-old Janiyah
usually get their medical care at Connectcare on Delmar. Not anymore.
Connectcare’s facilities have been closed.
The holidays, meanwhile, are a lot more complicated for Connectcare
workers. They’ve been laid off and now won’t be paid any severance or
vacation pay.
Connectcare says it can’t afford to pay them severance and vacation
days for the same reason it had to close, politics. Federal grants that
kept this place afloat were dropped under Obamacare. But Connectcare was
supposed to stay open because those grants would be replaced by the
state expanding Medicaid, which the feds would pay for 100 percent. But
Missouri refused.
If the new health care law hadn’t eliminated health care grants, this
place would have stayed open. If the Missouri legislature had agreed to
expand Medicaid, this place would have stayed open. In the end, both
patients and employees suffer because of someone else’s decision.
But it’s not just Connectcare. Because the legislature refuses to
expand Medicaid, hospitals across the state could lose anywhere from
$250 million to $400 million. And many will either cut back severely or
close entirely.
Legislative opponents of Medicaid expansion say Missouri can’t afford
to increase the program, even with the federal government picking up 90
percent of the cost.
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