Hospitals, insurers back state expansion

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Left out, however, would be illegal immigrants. People living in the United States without permission wouldn’t be eligible for Medicaid or, for that matter, any other coverage offered in the new health insurance exchanges.

Health-care advocates hope to persuade Illinois lawmakers, district by district, of the personal impact of the Medicaid expansion. One group analyzed Census data to estimate the number of people who would benefit in each Illinois legislative district.

“What is clear is there are low-income, uninsured people in every district from Chicago to downstate Illinois,” said Stephani Becker, of the Chicago-based Health and Disability Advocates.

Q. How much would the Medicaid expansion cost the state?

A. The federal government would pay the entire cost of expanding Medicaid to newly eligible Illinois residents for the first three years starting in 2014. The federal share falls to 90 percent by 2020, with the state paying the rest.

State costs would mount to more than $2 billion through 2022, according to a November report from the nonpartisan Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, which estimates the expansion would bring another $22 billion in federal money to the state during that time.

The powerful Illinois Hospital Association says that extra money would create jobs.

“We’re talking about billions of dollars coming into the state through federal Medicaid matching funds,” said A.J. Wilhelmi, of the hospital association. “That results in a great deal of economic activity in communities across the state and literally tens of thousands of jobs.”

Besides hospitals, the list of supporters of the Medicaid expansion includes AARP Illinois, Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, the Illinois Academy of Family Physicians and numerous community health centers and patient groups.

It’s a powerful list. But some lawmakers are wary of increasing Medicaid costs to the state, said Rep. David Harris, an Arlington Heights Republican who serves on the board of Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge.

Medicaid is an expensive program for a financially struggling state, said Harris, who hasn’t decided how he’ll vote. “When we start big expansions of an expensive program, that’s a big expense,” he said.

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