Arizona Senate Committee Votes to Drop out of Medicaid

The Arizona Senate's Appropriations Committee voted 8-5 to drop out of the federal Medicaid program and replace it with a far less extensive state program, according to a report by Victoria Advocate.

The Republican plan would replace the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, a program that goes beyond the usual state coverage limits, serving 1.3 million people, with a program serving up to 100,000 people, focusing on the seriously mentally ill and the long-term care population.

The bill's sponsor said the current program is financially unsustainable, but dropping out of Medicaid would cost the state about $7.5 billion in federal funding. A Republican senator who voted against the bill predicted that if the current program were eliminated, "by Christmas time, there will not be a rural hospital open in the state of Arizona."

Meanwhile, Gov. Jan Brewer is seeking a federal waiver to reduce the program to about 1 million people. HHS said Gov. Brewer could implement her plan on Oct. 1 and still qualify for federal funds.

Read the news report on Arizona Medicaid.

Read more coverage of Arizona's efforts to cut its Medicaid program

- Arizona's OK to Cut Medicaid May Open Door for Other States

- HHS Sec. Sebelius Will Allow Arizona to Cut 250K Medicaid Beneficiaries

- Arizona Hospitals Want to Assess $300 Million Bed Tax to Counter Medicaid Cuts

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