Legislature looks into cost of state Medicaid system

By Bob Mercer
State Capitol Bureau
Published/Last Modified on Monday, Jul 13, 2009 - 12:26:20 am CDT

PIERRE — Some members of the Legislature want to know how much it’s costing South Dakota’s Medicaid system to help pay for care of American Indian people when the federal Indian Health Service won’t help them.

The issue arose last week during the first meeting of the Legislature’s special committee studying Medicaid reimbursement.

State Social Services Secretary Deb Bowman said there is no question that South Dakota must help pay when the Indian Health Service refers patients to outside providers of health care.

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She described the Indian Health Service as “woefully inadequately funded” by Congress and said many services, including even normal births of babies, must be provided through outside clinics, hospitals and specialists.

South Dakota and North Dakota lost a federal court case on the matter in 2005. Bowman said the annual cost was about $4 million at the time of the lawsuit.

She told lawmakers she will bring back current numbers after her staff has the chance to look at more recent data.

“We feel the federal government should pay 100 percent of those costs,” she said. “That’s an interesting dilemma.”

Lawyers for the two states had tried in the court case to argue the federal government should pay the full amount for outside services, the same as the federal government does for care at Indian Health Service facilities.

But a three-judge panel for the United States Court of Appeals Eight Circuit ruled instead 2-1 that the state governments must pay part of the cost, under the standard state-federal cost-sharing approach taken in Medicaid known as FMAP.

The FMAP splits are different for each state and are based on three years of personal income data for each state.

South Dakota currently received 62.55 percent reimbursement from the federal government for Medicaid. State taxpayers are responsible for the other 37.45 percent.

In recent years South Dakota’s obligation has been increasing. In 2001, the federal share was 68.25 percent. Each 1 percent swing is worth more than $6.5 million in total Medicaid spending for South Dakota.

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Comments

1 comment(s)

    Health Care Reform wrote on Jul 13, 2009 1:49 PM:

    " Isn't Indian Health Services isn't a form nationalized health care? Are these the same patients that are included in Obamas statistics? I surely agree that we need to control costs of health care but if IHS is a picture of our national health care to come the real problems are yet to come. "

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