Working together, we can solve New Mexico’s health care crisis

Pete Campos is a Democratic state senator who represents the state’s 8th Senate District. New Mexico’s health care crisis demands our attention. Now. No person should suffer even one day of serious illness or injury because that person cannot find or afford to pay for good health care, yet that is exactly what happens each […]

Pete Campos is a Democratic state senator who represents the state’s 8th Senate District.

New Mexico’s health care crisis demands our attention. Now.

PeteCampos2No person should suffer even one day of serious illness or injury because that person cannot find or afford to pay for good health care, yet that is exactly what happens each day in New Mexico.

Months-long waits for medical appointments, hours-long drives to Albuquerque or across the state’s borders once appointments are made and the worsening shortage of health professionals throughout New Mexico are becoming routine and, sadly, expected. These and other problems will only get worse if state officials cut payments to doctors and other health care providers who provide services to Medicaid patients.

This is a complex dilemma that is not unique to New Mexico. The fact that policymakers, medical providers and patients in other states also face this challenge is of little comfort, although we can benefit from their experiences. We must work together, diligently and methodically, bringing people together, to solve this crisis.

We face some unique challenges in New Mexico.

  • More than 78 out of 100,000 Rio Arriba County residents die of opioid overdoses, more than triple the statewide rate, which is already among the highest in the United States.
  • More than one-third of New Mexicans are enrolled in Medicaid and the federal Children’s Health Insurance Program. Those patients face long waits for primary and specialty care across the state. Twenty percent of New Mexicans live in poverty, which is as much a health issue as an economic issue.
  • While the Affordable Care Act has significantly reduced the number of people without health insurance in New Mexico, more than 13 percent of New Mexicans were still uninsured in early 2015.
  • Most of New Mexico — the fifth largest state geographically in the United States — is officially considered to be a “health professional shortage area”, short more than 163 primary care providers. Not surprisingly, physicians who do work in New Mexico do so in urban areas.

It is that shortage of health care professionals that has led to what I expect will be a temporary closing of the obstetric and pediatric unit at Alta Vista Regional Hospital in Las Vegas. This unit, along with local midwives, provides an important service in northeastern New Mexico. I’m confident it will reopen, and I will do everything possible to help recruit and retain physicians and nurses to ensure that that happens quickly.

Some of the proposed solutions to New Mexico’s Medicaid funding crisis threaten to exacerbate our health care professional shortage. We’ve significantly increased Medicaid spending over the years, but we still face a shortage of tens of millions of dollars in state funding for the fiscal year that begins July 1. The state funding shortage grows to hundreds of millions of dollars because we won’t receive federal matching funds.

An understandable, although misguided, solution proposed by state officials to this dilemma is to cut the payments that are made to doctors, hospitals, clinics and others who treat Medicaid patients. This short-term solution will create long-term problems as doctors leave the state and clinics close, worsening our health care crisis and further weakening our economy.

Instead, we should listen to providers who have offered solutions that have worked in other states, such as imposing new taxes on providers and dedicating that revenue — and the matching federal funds that would come with it — to fund Medicaid. At the same time, the state should enforce its contracts with Medicaid managed care organizations (MCOs) to ensure that the millions of dollars we pay them every year actually result in better health care. If the MCOs meet their obligations to provide care coordination, emergency room diversion and chronic disease management, Medicaid costs will not rise as fast. Providing the right amount of care at the right time will, as the state Human Services Department has promised, save millions of dollars.

None of this will be easy or quick. Policymakers, state officials, managed care organizations, health care providers and patients must work together now with the goal of improving access to affordable health care in New Mexico. This cooperation may be initiated at a series of regional town halls convened by New Mexico First or the regional health councils. We could build on these town halls with a statewide summit where the public, policymakers and experts formulate health policies that will address our needs. Doing so will make for a healthier, more productive society that will benefit all of us.

We're ad free

That means that we rely on support from readers like you. Help us keep reporting on the most important New Mexico Stories by donating today.

Related

Former LFC chair John Arthur Smith dies

Former LFC chair John Arthur Smith dies

Longtime powerful state senator John Arthur Smith, a conservative Democrat who wielded a large amount of power around the state budget for years, died…
How Native families are particularly impacted by food insecurity

How Native families are particularly impacted by food insecurity

One in five children in New Mexico and one in seven people in the state experience food insecurity, according to a report presented to…
New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

With 8,800 nurse positions posted for hiring in New Mexico, hospital leadership told the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee on Tuesday that access…
SCOTUS rejects attempt to pause implementation of federal methane rule

SCOTUS rejects attempt to pause implementation of federal methane rule

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected an attempt to delay the implementation of a federal rule intended to curb methane emissions from oil and gas…
Air Force extends comment period on low-altitude flights in the Gila area

Air Force extends comment period on low-altitude flights in the Gila area

Following requests from members of New Mexico’s congressional delegation, the U.S. Air Force has extended the comment period on a proposal to increase low-altitude…
PRC raises community solar cap by 300 megawatts

PRC raises community solar cap by 300 megawatts

State regulators are increasing the amount of community solar that can come online in New Mexico. During its Thursday meeting, the New Mexico Public…
Early childhood summit convened to discuss future of program

Early childhood summit convened to discuss future of program

About 200 people from tribal governors to legislators to advocates and teachers gathered at Bishop’s Lodge to discuss Early Childhood Education’s future in New…
Stansbury outlines funding secured for early childhood and youth services programs

Stansbury outlines funding secured for early childhood and youth services programs

U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury secured $8.3 million for childhood development and youth services in the 1st congressional district through federal community project funding. Stansbury,…
Amid new graduation requirements, what do high schoolers want to learn?

Amid new graduation requirements, what do high schoolers want to learn?

By Margaret O’Hara, The Santa Fe New Mexican The main things that bring Brayan Chavez to school every day: Seeing, talking to and engaging with…
Heinrich introduces legislation to address affordable housing

Heinrich introduces legislation to address affordable housing

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-New Mexico, introduced legislation in the Senate on Monday that would provide tax credits to incentivize new investments and additional…
New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

With 8,800 nurse positions posted for hiring in New Mexico, hospital leadership told the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee on Tuesday that access…
As rhetoric around undocumented workers heats up, new report shows their tax contribution

As rhetoric around undocumented workers heats up, new report shows their tax contribution

A nonprofit group released data showing how much taxes migrants pay in the U.S. as rhetoric on immigration grows more prominent just months from…
Heinrich helps introduce resolution in response to death of Amber Nicole Thurman

Heinrich helps introduce resolution in response to death of Amber Nicole Thurman

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich helped to introduce a resolution on Tuesday in the Senate that every patient has the basic right to emergency health…
Project 2025: How a consolidation of federal power could ban abortion

Project 2025: How a consolidation of federal power could ban abortion

If Project 2025 becomes federal policy next year, it would upend abortion rights and reproductive healthcare through a reshaping of and consolidation of power…
New abortion clinic in Las Cruces expected to provide more abortion training

New abortion clinic in Las Cruces expected to provide more abortion training

One of the consequences of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision is the lack of abortion care training for medical residents training to become…
New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

New Mexico in critical nursing shortage

With 8,800 nurse positions posted for hiring in New Mexico, hospital leadership told the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee on Tuesday that access…
Heinrich helps introduce resolution in response to death of Amber Nicole Thurman

Heinrich helps introduce resolution in response to death of Amber Nicole Thurman

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich helped to introduce a resolution on Tuesday in the Senate that every patient has the basic right to emergency health…
WNMU: Grow your own rural healthcare providers pipeline 

WNMU: Grow your own rural healthcare providers pipeline 

Western New Mexico University wants to create a pipeline of programs with a rural healthcare focus to try to address the medical provider shortage…
Oil-and-gas giant gives big to dark money group

Oil-and-gas giant gives big to dark money group

By Trip Jennings, New Mexico In Depth Chevron Corporation gave the single largest contribution to a dark money group that attempted but failed to…
Survey shows candidates are for legislative reform, unsure about ranked choice voting

Survey shows candidates are for legislative reform, unsure about ranked choice voting

A survey by four nonprofit organizations showed that candidates for state and federal office support pro-democracy and government reform, according to those groups. Common…
Project 2025 takes aim at elections: ‘Sowing the seeds of doubt’

Project 2025 takes aim at elections: ‘Sowing the seeds of doubt’

Project 2025, a political agenda by conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, seeks to empower the next conservative president towards what appears to be…
Former LFC chair John Arthur Smith dies

Former LFC chair John Arthur Smith dies

Longtime powerful state senator John Arthur Smith, a conservative Democrat who wielded a large amount of power around the state budget for years, died…
Politics newsletter: High court gift ban and buprenorphine

Politics newsletter: High court gift ban and buprenorphine

Hello fellow political junkies! Currently, Supreme Court justices do not have the same gift restrictions that members of Congress and other federal officials, including…
Torrez announces legislation priorities to protect victims of sexual assault

Torrez announces legislation priorities to protect victims of sexual assault

New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez unveiled two legislative priorities to expand crime victim protections on Friday. Torrez held a press conference in Albuquerque…

GET INVOLVED

© 2023 New Mexico Political Report