Oregon Health Care Picks Up Where Obama Left Off
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Feb. 28, 2012 photo, Madeline Hutchinson plays with her son Emmanuel at their home in Salem, Ore. Pregnant with her seventh child and desperate to kick a methamphetamine habit, Hutchinson turned to a program from the local Medicaid provider that connected her with a mentor and other support that helped her stay off drugs and give birth to a healthy boy. Emmanuel, now 2, was born drug-free and is the only one of her children still in her custody. But Hutchinsons health provider cant get reimbursed for much of the treatment she credits with saving her life, keeping her healthy and protecting the health of her child. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)(Credit: AP)SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Pregnant with her seventh child and desperate to kick a meth addiction, Madeline Hutchinson turned to a program from the local Medicaid provider that connected her with a mentor and other support that she says helped her get off drugs.
Emmanual, now 2, was born healthy.
“We need mentors. We need advocates,” Hutchinson said. “We need someone that’s going to come along and say, ‘This baby needs to be clean. And we’re going to show you how.’”
There’s a smattering of similar preventative care programs around Oregon, and not just for addicted mothers. But there hasn’t been a statewide push — until now.
Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber last week signed a law that will create new regional entities, called coordinated care organizations, which will be expected to establish programs such as the one Hutchinson credits with turning around her life.
Kitzhaber says the plan will improve care, reduce costs and serve as a model for the rest of the nation.
But critics doubt the potential for significant savings and say the program could even increase costs.
The coordinated care organizations will be responsible for looking after Medicaid patients in their area. Local organizations will determine their exact models.
But each will be a holistic approach that addresses every aspect of health — mental, medical and dental — with a focus in particular on people with mental illnesses, addictions or chronic conditions like diabetes, heart disease, asthma and kidney failure.
The idea is to target the costliest patients and provide up-front care that can prevent emergency room visits and other expensive interventions, potentially saving millions.
Oregon has long been a pioneer in finding new approaches to health care, and Kitzhaber — a former emergency room doctor who has championed overhauling the system — believes the new law could keep people healthier and save money.
Officials say that if all 50 states adopted Oregon’s changes, the federal budget would save more than $1.5 trillion over the next 10 years — $300 billion more than Congress’ failed “super committee” was trying to save over the same time period.
“I’m convinced … the federal government is going to have to do something drastic about the cost of health care,” Kitzhaber said. “And it’s not going to be driven by how you keep people healthy. It’s going to be driven by how do you keep from defaulting on the national debt, which is two completely different conversations.”




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