So, Medicaid, What’s She Supposed To Do Now?

Yesterday Christine came by for a cup of coffee, and this is how the conversation started. “I thought my pharmacy bag seemed awfully light when I picked it up.” Over the years, she and I have formed this little charade on how we handle these conversations about Medicaid. It’s kind of like a comedian and his straight man trying to make it in The Berkshires while knowing that the material just isn’t too funny. But how else do you deal with this reality played over and over and over? So knowing my part well, I ask “Why was it so light?” And her reply, “Medicaid has disallowed four of my medications.” The straight man had no line to deliver. She asked me, “What am I to do now?” The straight man still didn’t know what to say, so she said “Punt?” Christine said, “I’m not ready to do that.”

I knew that but I truly am out of options of what to say. I don’t know how many times her doctor can act more like a magician than a physician and pull a rabbit out of her hat finding another medication, a new combination that works, a referral to a specialist that turns into a miracle too good to believe. We hear story after story of the doctors who scam Medicaid for millions of dollars, but we seldom hear of the doctors that still take Medicaid patients and work through and around a bureaucratic system that has long forgotten why it was formed but rather is more interested in its own survival than for the vulnerable people it was formed to serve. These doctors are unsung heroes.

Twice a year, Medicaid revisits the approved drug list for the patients under their care. In January, these very drugs now pulled off the list were put on the approved list. Doctors breathed a sigh of relief and began prescribing them for patients that needed these drugs for a better quality of life. Now, five months later, the drugs are gone, the patients have lost faith and neither have any hope for an answer coming from a huge bureaucratic mess.

You see, I think that the problem is that late last year, a new use for Cymbalta was found. It not only was a useful medication for depression, but it was found that it also helped people with extreme nerve pain. This fact would open the door for doctors to prescribe the drug to people with neurological disorders, neuropathy from diabetes, and other conditions. The other medications I didn’t even try to figure out the why or wherefore. It boggles my mind when I hear people my age talking about “Medicaid ” planning for their parents. I can only assume that they have had no firsthand knowledge on working with this agency. Single-payer insurance plan for the nation! I can think of nothing more horrific if it turns out to be administered like Medicaid has been for the poor. I realize there are no easy answers for any of these things, but I can only believe if we try to switch our thinking from a sickness viewpoint to one of wellness, we may begin to turn this elephant around. Christine feels that had she had more preventative care when she was a child that her illness would not be as advanced today. That may or may not be the case and in regards to her, we will never know, but don’t the children of today deserve a better outlook, and how can promoting good health be wrong?
So yesterday was a day that was pretty bleak, but today was a day that again saw Christine looking for answers on how to cope with the extreme nerve pain that would make a lesser person knuckle under. Her latest goal is to score a muscle stimulating machine she was denied last January, causing the doctor to prescribe medication to cope with the pain rather than muscle stimulation. So, she asks me, the straight man, what do I think? Do I think that we can find a way to get one? And me, who am I to rain on her parade? I say, “yeah, yeah, we could try that.”

3 Responses to “So, Medicaid, What’s She Supposed To Do Now?”

  1. TimFerris Says:

    I wonder if these arbiters of who deserves what have arbiters over them, who determine whether they are serving the public good or serving the interests of the agency first. This is an awful lot of horsing around in a short time period, and also over the years, as we’ve watched in disbelief and dismay. Are they making sure they can stay bureaucrat-busy, that they have enough work to do, switching Medicaid recipients back and forth and back and forth? Doesn’t this on-again-off-again game call their basic bureaucratic judgment into question? What’s their motivation? What’s their expertise? What’s their mandate? Certainly, their mandate doesn’t come from us–we would require them to respect our neighbors’ dignity and do the preventative things necessary to keep them from racking up the big bills on crisis visits to the ER.

    What’s their liability? What’s their exposure?

  2. Jennifer Tweedy Says:

    One othe horrific problem that has been mandated is the change to managed care plans. I was forced onto one and while I have explained to everyone I have spoken to this has mad mylife hell and it only promises to get worse. I have several serious health issues including a terminal illness. Not one of my doctors is covered under any plan. At the end of July I must begin seeing all new dr.s who do not know me nor do I know them. I have a longstanding working relationship with my PCP and specialists and the state in its almighty wisdom thinks I can just pick new drs. After all because as everyone knows “there are other drs out there” yes there are also voodoo priests doesn’t meen I want to see one. The wisdom- and I use that term very lightly- and understanding they have shown is less then steller. I don’t think I would be so upset if there wasn’t any major health issues, or if the state was so caught up with the “rules” that it doesn’t leave any room for common sense. A person at medicaid today actually told me that a person on a managed care program could be returned to fee for service medicaid if they say commited a fraud or threatened the Dr. She then went on to qualify that threatening a dr would just get them moved to a different MCP. So I asked basically all someone like me needed to do was act in a threatening manner to 3 PCPs on 3 MCPs and I would be returned to fee for service? She actually answered yes. WHAT?? Of course I would prob end up in jail but considering my life span now is about in its last 1-2 years how long could they keep me— and prisoners actually have better health care so I hear hmmm maybe need to rethink this.(just joking )

  3. Depending on Medicaid | Brewed Fresh Daily Says:

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