Navajo Nation may pursue own Medicaid system regardless of study
Updated: 02/09/2013 11:00:30 PM MST
The tribe asked that a feasibility study be done, to see how viable its own Medicaid system would be. Though a lack of funding stalled the study, the passage of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act in 2010 made the study possible. The act was passed when U.S. President Barack Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in March that year. The study was a six-month study that came to an end last year, though Curley did not know how much it cost, he said. The study assumed that the tribe's Medicaid system that would serve Navajo within the tribe's geographic boundaries would alleviate some of that confusion. "It would just be simpler for us. We wouldn't have to face the different rules that different states have," said Erny Zah, spokesman for the Office of the President and Vice President of the Navajo Nation. However, the process would not be simple. To put into place the infrastructure, technology and people needed to make the program work, the cost currently is estimated to be between $100 million and $120 million, Curley said, though he noted that the study said it was a very rough number. "It won't be billions," he said. It also would not be for several years that the program would get started, Curley said, though he sees it definitely working. "I have a fantastic belief in Indian peoples that they can do what they believe they can do," Curley said, noting that this system will be able to incorporate traditional medicine and will be a more culturally sensitive system. "It will be successful."Other leaders have not been quite as confident. New Mexico politicians in August last year expressed doubts about both the state's and the tribe's plans for Medicaid during a meeting in Shiprock. "If we don't do a lot of planning, there's going to be a lot of collateral damage," said David Foster, then chairman of the Health Care Committee for the Association of Commerce and Industry of New Mexico.
The Navajo Nation president and vice president both have abstained comment for the time being, Zah said Friday, because they have not yet reviewed the study. They are hopeful though. "We understand it would be a lot," Zah said. "But we're definitely capable."
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