Los Angeles Times

Children’s health at risk in Trump country

Republican cuts would hit rural white kids hard

- By Noam N. Levey

MONTGOMERY, W.Va. — Communitie­s like this aging West Virginia coal town along the Kanawha River were key to President Trump’s victory last year; more than two-thirds of voters in surroundin­g Fayette County backed the Republican nominee.

Now, families in this rural county and hundreds like it that supported Trump face the loss of a critical safety net for children as congressio­nal Republican­s move to cut hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade from Medicaid, the halfcentur­y-old government health plan for the poor.

Much of the debate over Republican efforts to roll back the Affordable Care Act has focused on the impact cuts would have on working-age adults, millions of whom gained coverage under the healthcare law that President Obama signed in 2010.

But in Fayette County and 779 other mostly rural counties across the country — the vast majority of which went for Trump — more than half the children rely for coverage on Medicaid and the related Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, according to a Times analysis of county voting data, census data and Medicaid enrollment data.

That is stoking rising alarm among parents, pediatrici­ans and other medical providers in West Virginia and other largely rural states, including Arkansas, Tennessee, New Mexico and Maine.

“There is just no way to cut Medicaid on the scale that they are talking about and avoid hitting

kids,” said Dr. Traci Acklin, who grew up in Fayette County and now runs the only pediatrici­an’s practice in Montgomery, out of the first floor of a community hospital founded a century ago to care for sick miners.

“Without the health insurance, kids aren’t going to get the immunizati­ons and the checkups. There are going to be more lost days of school. More trips to the emergency room .... It would be food or healthcare for a lot of these families.”

These concerns are, in turn, putting increasing pressure on Republican lawmakers, such as West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, one of several GOP senators whose reservatio­ns about Medicaid cuts stalled the GOP healthcare bill in the Senate last week.

Over the last two decades, successive presidents, congressio­nal leaders and governors from both parties have steadily expanded health coverage for children through Medicaid and CHIP, which was created in the late ’90s to provide coverage for the children of working-class families who earned too much to qualify for Medicaid.

Today, just 5% of kids nationwide lack health coverage, down from nearly 14% two decades ago. Many experts see that gain as one of the great public health successes of recent decades.

A growing body of research shows Medicaid leads to better health, improves children’s reading and test scores, lowers high school dropout rates and even increases future earnings.

“There is very strong return on the Medicaid investment,” said Joan Alker, executive director of the Center for Children and Families.

Republican plans

But the House and Senate Republican healthcare bills — which go well beyond repealing Obamacare, as the Affordable Care Act is often called — threaten farreachin­g changes that could reverse many of those gains.

Overall, the Senate GOP legislatio­n would slash more than a third of federal Medicaid funds over the next 20 years and nearly double the ranks of the uninsured by 2026, according to recent analyses by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Budget analysts and many state governors, including some Republican­s, predict such a retrenchme­nt will have a devastatin­g impact, including on children, as some 45 million low-income children rely on Medicaid and CHIP nationally.

“We as a country should stop and realize the number of children whose lives are at stake here,” said Marcy Doderer, chief executive of Arkansas Children’s Hospital.

This wasn’t the vision Trump promised on the campaign trail. The billionair­e businessma­n pledged repeatedly to ensure all Americans were taken care of, especially the “forgotten men and women” he said Washington had left behind.

More recently, the president called for a healthcare bill “with heart.”

Many Republican officials insist they won’t jeopardize coverage gains, pledging their healthcare legislatio­n will ensure “that nobody falls through the cracks,” as Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said recently on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.”

But in small towns and rural areas with few other resources, Medicaid and CHIP are among the only things that keep many families from falling into those cracks.

“I don’t know what we would have done without it,” said Nikki Given, a young mother who brought her 1year-old son, Connor, to Acklin’s office recently to have his ears checked. Medicaid coverage has enabled Connor to get the intravenou­s antibiotic­s and minor surgery he needs to relieve persistent ear infections.

Given works at a day care that doesn’t have a health plan. Her fiance, who is about to start work at a local sawmill, also won’t get health benefits.

Without the Medicaid coverage, Connor’s antibiotic­s and medical care would have cost the parents several thousand dollars, Acklin estimates.

Areas in need

Medicaid and CHIP provide a critical backstop across this region of West Virginia, where coal mining jobs have increasing­ly been replaced by lower-paying work that often doesn’t provide health insurance.

Montgomery General Hospital, where Acklin practices, is one of the few remaining employers in Montgomery, a town that’s been losing population for nearly half a century.

A small university campus here is closing, as is the local high school. And although coal trains still rumble past town, automation and declining demand mean fewer and fewer jobs in coal. Down the river, even the hulking coal-fired power plant has shuttered.

Acklin, who came back to Montgomery to practice 16 years ago, sees many families who struggle to put food on the table. Routine checkups regularly uncover heart murmurs, untreated asthma and other serious medical issues.

And with the advent of the opioid epidemic, Acklin is seeing more children being raised by grandparen­ts.

“I don’t think people understand how all this affects kids,” Acklin said between seeing patients, nearly all of whom are on Medicaid.

Some of the same issues challenge large urban areas. Several of the 780 counties most dependent on Medicaid and CHIP to cover children include cities with more than 1 million residents, including Miami, Philadelph­ia and parts of New York City, which covers five counties.

But in many big cities such as Los Angeles and Chicago, where jobs are relatively plentiful, most children don’t have government health coverage, according to the enrollment data assembled by the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University.

By contrast, 622 of the 780 counties where a majority of children are on Medicaid or CHIP have fewer than 50,000 people. Most of the counties are overwhelmi­ngly white, with the exception of predominan­tly African American counties in the Mississipp­i Delta and heavily Latino counties in New Mexico and along the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

In several poor, rural states — including Arkansas,

‘We as a country should stop and realize the number of children whose lives are at stake here.’ — Marcy Doderer, chief executive of Arkansas Children’s Hospital

Mississipp­i and New Mexico — a majority of children in more than threequart­ers of counties rely on one of the two government health plans.

“This is the safety net here,” said Keith Goodwin, president of East Tennessee Children’s Hospital in Knoxville, more than twothirds of whose patients are on Medicaid. “It is hugely important for our families.”

Since Medicaid’s founding in the mid-1960s, the federal government has paid a share of all medical expenses incurred by patients in the program, nearly half of whom are poor children.

But the Republican legislatio­n in the House and Senate would end that openended flow of money, replacing it with fixed payments to states, no matter how much patient care costs.

The funding cap in the Senate bill would increase only at the rate of inflation, leaving states with an increasing­ly larger share of medical costs, which have typically increased faster than inflation.

And because the same flow of federal Medicaid money covers care for children as well as for poor seniors and the disabled, deep cuts would probably force states to decide who is more deserving of medical care.

“That is a terrible, terrible choice,” said Greg LaFrancois, president of the Aroostook Medical Center in northern Maine.

 ?? Noam N. Levey Los Angeles Times ?? “I DON’T THINK people understand how all this affects kids,” says Dr. Traci Acklin, pictured examining 4-year-old Maicee Hernandez at the only pediatrici­an’s practice in Trump-friendly Montgomery, W.Va.
Noam N. Levey Los Angeles Times “I DON’T THINK people understand how all this affects kids,” says Dr. Traci Acklin, pictured examining 4-year-old Maicee Hernandez at the only pediatrici­an’s practice in Trump-friendly Montgomery, W.Va.
 ??  ?? 1-YEAR-OLD Connor Prather’s treatment for ear infections would have cost his parents several thousand dollars if not for Medicaid, Dr. Traci Acklin estimates.
1-YEAR-OLD Connor Prather’s treatment for ear infections would have cost his parents several thousand dollars if not for Medicaid, Dr. Traci Acklin estimates.

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