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California budget targets health care
By Nick Davis and Rafael Azul
24 June 2003
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Last November, the California government announced the most
severe budget crisis in Californias historya budget
shortfall of $38 billion for fiscal years 2003 and 2004. One month
later, Governor Gray Davis imposed emergency budget cuts of $10.2
billion. These cuts are exacerbating a chronic
health care crisis affecting nearly all counties in California.
So far, the county most affected is Los Angeles, where the
December cuts, plus anticipated reductions to take place under
a proposed budget for 2004, are crippling the infrastructure of
public health. Intent on defending the interests of the wealthy,
all of Californias political parties, the governor and the
trade unions are complicit in the demolition of this essential
social need.
In May 2003, 800,000 uninsured residents of Los Angeles County,
making up a third of the states population, lost access
to neighborhood medical care when the County Board of Supervisors
closed 16 community-based medical clinics. The supervisors also
terminated the Public-Private-Partnership, a program under which
Los Angeles County contracted health care with private clinics
for the uninsured.
In their decision to cut the program, the supervisors cited
the states refusal to fund health care and the federal governments
refusal to extend a rules waiver allowing federal Medicare funds
to be used to support Medi-Cal, the state agency in charge of
health services to the poor. Thousands will be forced to travel
to the overcrowded emergency rooms of the only two full-service
hospitals still operating. As part of this process, 2,475 county
health workers face layoffs.
High Desert Hospital in Lancaster, Calif., the only public
hospital in an isolated corner of Los Angeles County, has been
converted from a general hospital to an outpatient clinic, serving
residents of the 1,600-square-mile high-desert region who now
will have to travel about two hours to get to another public hospital.
To save an estimated $30 million, pink slips went out on June
15 to 79 doctors, 152 nursing staff and 210 administrative support
personnel at King-Drew Medical Center, a county general hospital
that serves the poor black and Latino areas on Los Angeless
south side. According to the Los Angeles Times, doctors
report that the cuts affect neonatal, adolescent and pediatric
medicine the hardest. LAs south side has a 15 percent teen
pregnancy rate. About 38 percent of the areas newborns are
low birth-weight babies, many of whom require intensive care.
Similar cuts are also affecting counties across the state,
including Alameda, Sonoma and Santa Clara counties in northern
California. These areas are also being hit by high rates of unemployment
that put an added pressure on public facilities. Unemployment
in San Jose, the heart of high-tech Silicon Valley, has surpassed
the 8 percent mark; in Los Angeles, it is about 6.6 percent. In
addition to seeing more uninsured patients, health facilities
must also cope with higher costs.
In Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, two
clinics are being eliminated that currently serve 25,000 people.
Most severely affected will be patients suffering from chronic
conditions, such as diabetics, as well as HIV and pediatric patients.
For citizens of North Oakland, the closure of the North Central
clinic means going to Highland Hospital, where patients already
wait four or five hours to receive medical attention.
In addition to the clinic closures, Los Angeles County Supervisors
plan the shutdown of three hospitals: Rancho Los Amigos, Harbor-UCLA
and Olive View-UCLA. In a special tax election last November,
LA residents voted to save two of themOlive View-UCLA and
Harbor-UCLA. However, their existence remains tenuous, as supervisors
have the right to transfer the funds elsewhere.
The supervisors had planned to close the Rancho Los Amigos
National Rehabilitation Center (RLA), even before the full-extent
of Daviss cuts became known. A lawsuit by medical professionals
against the county supervisors plans attracted widespread
attention. The federal courts stepped in at the last minute, announcing
a permanent injunction that so far has stopped RLAs closure,
but the county is aggressively appealing that injunction.
A Rancho Los Amigos patient, Janelle Rouse, told a World
Socialist Web Site reporter how her life has revolved around
RLA for more than 32 years. When she was 13 years old and riding
in a horse show, her horse went down, causing a massive brain
hemorrhage that put her in a five-month coma.
Janelle recounted, After six months attending inpatient
therapy at RLA, where I had to learn to walk, talk, read, write,
stand and eat all over again, I was able to return home to my
family. I have remained actively involved with the Rancho since
that day, both as an outpatient and as a volunteer. I will never
be able to give back what I have received from this facility.
Rodrigo Rivas, a 37-year-old father of four, also spoke to
the WSWS. A victim of a car accident, he is paralyzed from the
waist down. After being stabilized at the Salinas Hospital in
central California, he came to Los Angeles, depressed and suicidal,
where some people at the Martin Luther King Jr. Hospital
recommended that I seek assistance at Rancho. At Rancho they rebuilt
my confidence, and by teaching me to cook and bathe myself I developed
a real sense of independence.
If Rancho Los Amigos were to reopen, it would be as a private
for-profit hospital for the well-off and well-insured. Its closure
would affect 1,000 patients directly, those with no comparable
place to go, plus hundreds of outpatients that make use of RLAs
services.
Governor Davis released his latest budget proposal on May 15.
It would slash $1 billion statewide from health care services.
The cuts also include elimination of 18 optional benefits provided
by Medi-Cal, including hospice care, adult dental services, optometry,
physical therapy, the Multi Purpose Senior Services Program and
acupuncture as part of a plan to achieve a $3.6 billion saving.
According to a letter received by the WSWS, these cuts will
devastate Californias welfare recipients. Other Medi-Cal
programs to be axed include rubber gloves, urinary and incontinence
supplies (catheters, leg bags, adult diapers), bandages and dressings,
and Durable Medical Equipment such as wheelchairs and ventilators.
Without these items, many disabled people face severe illness
and [deaths] are even possible, the letter said.
The budget would also change eligibility for recipients of
Medi-Cal, the states version of Medicaid. The new rules
require counties to review a recipients eligibility on a
quarterly basis. Davis anticipates this will terminate health
benefits to an estimated 563,000 Medi-Cal enrollees at a savings
of $388 million$194 million of which will accrue to the
states general fund. Since Medi-Cal is supported dollar
for dollar by federal matching funds, with this cut the state
forfeits $1.34 billion in federal funds, doubling its effect on
the health care system.
As it is, Medi-Cal is a Byzantine patchwork of health programs,
a bureaucratic maze that, according to one study, already excludes
more than 800,000 people who would be covered under streamlined
application procedures. More than six million state residents
are covered by Medi-Cal, including the three million covered by
a state-managed care insurance.
The May 15 proposal also slashes Medi-Cal reimbursement rates
to doctors and pharmacists by 5 percent, on top of a 10 percent
cut last December, making them among the lowest of the 50 states.
Even before the fee reductions took place, many physicians were
refusing to take on more Medi-Cal patients unless fees were increased.
The statutory deadline for the California legislature to pass
a budget was June 15. With a fiscal deficit of $38.4 billion over
the next 14 months, and no agreement in sight, dire predications
are appearing in the press of what could happen if the state were
to become insolvent. At the present rate of expenditure, the state
will run out of cash in August and the banks will not accept checks
drawn on the states general fund. California state employeesfrom
college professors to medical professionals to highway patrol
officersmay not be able to cash their paychecks this fall.
A solution to this crisis, based on insuring adequate state health
services to all by taxing big business profits and the wealthy,
is anathema to both Democrats and Republicans in the California
legislature, as well as to Davis, an aggressive fundraiser who
depends on the financial contributions of big business.
Last month, an indication of the human cost of the cuts was
given in a report that said emergency room patients are already
forced to wait up to four days for a bed at County USC Medical
Center and that there have been fatalities as a direct result.
Despite those findings, county supervisors intended to reduce
the facility by another 100 beds, but were prevented from doing
so by the same injunction that kept Rancho Los Amigos open. Not
to be deterred, county supervisors are moving to realize a few
million dollars savings by cutting off care to residents
of other counties, in defiance of federal regulations.
Physicians assistant Karla Copeland, who works in the
emergency unit at County USC California Hospital, told the WSWS,
The nursing staff is stretched to its limit, with more patients
coming in all the time. Those admitted have to wait until there
are beds available. Some of them need ICU [intensive care unit]
beds when they are not available.
The county is working to cut a hundred beds. That is
unacceptable. I dont even want to think about what that
will mean for patients. I am aware of the bill in the county to
outlaw the transferring of patients from private hospitals to
county facilities, but I dont think it will pass, because
if it does the private hospital system will go broke.
Patient Larry Clarke came to the emergency room with back pain.
He said it is normal to see more than 100 patients waiting in
the emergency units clinic. On the day we spoke with him,
he had a 9:30 a.m. appointment, but his chart was lost and he
waited until 11 p.m. to be seen. He then faced an additional wait
for prescriptions, which lasted until after midnight.
I have seen people throwing up blood, Larry said,
and still they are waiting three or four hours later. I
cant blame the nurses or the staffwhat can they do
if there are no beds? Davis sent a representative to the hospital
to check it out and after he saw what he came for he said the
hospital was in great shape!
In a Los Angeles Times study, several health professionals
described the horrific conditions inside the public hospitals.
Dr. Brent Asplin, a nationally recognized researcher, visited
the County USC hospital in March. He described the emergency room,
reporting that as many as 156 patients were crowded into 43 treatment
areas. Exams were conducted in hallways, in violation of the patients
privacy. In an interview with the newspaper, Dr. Asplin, who has
studied emergency rooms all over the nation, declared Los Angeles
County-USC overcrowding to be the worst he had seen.
Dr. Edward Newton, an emergency room physician, also quoted
by the Times, said, We often have to squeeze three
patients, both men and women together, into one booth designed
to hold two. The lights are never turned off, the noise level
is high, there are no facilities to wash, and there is no privacy.
In a sworn statement, filed as part of the lawsuit in federal
court to prevent the county from cutting 100 beds from the 745-bed
facility, he described three recent deaths directly resulting
from the cuts.
Last month, a 40-year-old woman who arrived with an arterial
blockage in her lungs was kept in the emergency room for more
than 30 hours because no intensive care bed was available. She
suffered cardiac arrest and died.
A 75-year-old woman was admitted with a broken hip, normally
a treatable condition. She had to wait a week for surgery because
no bed was available and in the interim developed blood clots
and died from lying prone for so long.
In the third case, a man was brought in with shortness of breath.
This patient died before we were able to help him,
Dr. Newton said, adding, Had we the capacity to diagnose
him earlier, his life would have been saved.
Dr. Newton explained to the WSWS: Many of the emergency
room patients come into the ER in serious condition. We can take
care of them, but many of them need intensive care (ICU) treatment
and there are no ICU beds. The nurses that work on them have still
more patients coming in, who also need urgent treatment, so the
whole system backs up.
The working class, the disabled and the elderly, however, have
yet to find a political vehicle that will defend their interests.
State teachers, health professionals and social service workers
have expressed anger at the proposed cuts in services. In one
protest, RLA patients and workers, members of Local 660 of the
Service Employees International Union (SEIU), set up over a dozen
protest tents at the door of the hospital.
The protest, though not well publicized, drew enthusiastic
community support, with passing motorists honking their approval.
Many joined in at the twice-daily rallies that took place near
the hospital.
Despite the high level of support in defense of hospitals and
clinics, protests are being stage-managed by the SEIU leaders
and the California AFL-CIO, and provide no political alternative
to Davis, the Democrats and the Republicans. Union leaders seek
to limit demands to pressuring the politicians and the courts,
not defending hospitals and clinics. They call for a balanced
approach of closures, wage cuts and tax increases, according to
SEIU Local 660s web site.
Using the threat of more layoffs, Davis has demanded that the
trade unions representing state workers come up with $500 million
in wage and working condition concessions. There is little doubt
that the SEIU and AFL-CIO leaderships will press state workers
to comply with the governors demand. In Santa Clara County,
the SEIU already has volunteered a wage cut for its members. In
effect, its position is consistent with the strategy of the entire
AFL-CIO: to protect its relationship with the Democratic Party
above all; to block and demoralize the thousands of workers who
are looking for a political alternative; and, if need be, to sacrifice
living standards, education and health services to its alliance
with the Democratic Party.
The Democratic governor is also relying on the trade union
leadership to contain resistance from workers to budget cuts affecting
health care and every state program providing services to the
poor. In the face of the onslaught against social services, not
one union leader has raised the call for strike action, not to
mention mobilizing the working class in a political struggle against
the attacks.
See Also:
US: New attacks on Medicare
and Medicaid
[22 January 2003]
Los Angeles health system
near meltdown
[30 November 2002]
Southern California:
record poverty and industrial decay
[13 July 2002]
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