In Florida, more than 4.3 million people are enrolled in Medicaid. (Adobe Stock)

 

By Trimmel Gomes
Public News Service

The budget reconciliation bill being considered by the U.S. Senate proposes $863 billion in Medicaid reductions over a decade, with 10.9 million Americans projected to lose coverage by 2034, according to a June 4 Congressional Budget Office report.

In Florida, where 760,000 Medicaid enrollees rely on community health centers, advocates say the cuts would destabilize preventive care and overwhelm hospitals.

Austin Helton, CEO of Brevard Health Alliance, said the cuts would dismantle primary-care access, rupturing what he called Florida’s “health-care ecosystem.”

“If you cut spending on Medicaid and ACA, which primarily pays for access to primary-care health services at community health centers, that access is gone,” he said. “The patients are still going to need that care. They’re just going to end up sicker and they’re going to end up going to more costly and more complex environments like the emergency room at the hospital.”

Helton said the cuts would hit hardest at health-care facilities such as those under Brevard, where 60% to 70% of patients use Medicaid or ACA plans.

While the Florida Policy Institute warns of clinic closures and reduced hours, supporters say the changes target inefficiencies, with House leaders claiming they’ll reduce wasteful spending while protecting vulnerable patients.

Florida’s community health centers, which serve one in eight Medicaid patients statewide, face what advocates call an impossible math problem: more patients but fewer resources.

“As the population in Florida increases, the number of our patients increase, the number of Medicaid enrollees decreases,” said Jonathan Chapman, CEO of the Florida Association of Community Health Centers. “Therefore, by process of elimination, you’re going to see more uninsured people on our doorstep.”

The Congressional Budget Office projects Florida would lose $7.3 billion in federal Medicaid funds by 2030 under the House plan, with rural counties such as Gadsden and DeSoto facing severe strain. The bill remains stalled in the Senate, where Republicans are divided over many issues, including rural hospital protections.