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A single-payer Medicaid system for Maryland [Letter]

Regarding your article on Connecticut's health exchange ("Maryland looks to Connecticut as exchange model," March 14), Maryland should copy that state's one-payer Medicaid system for the poor.

In 2012, Connecticut's Medicaid program jettisoned its private insurance plans, a system similar to Maryland's Medicaid program, and formed "Husky," a state-administered Medicaid plan with only one payer — the state.

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The impetus for the change came after outside audits of two private Medicaid insurers in Connecticut showed significantly less money going to actual medical care than reported by the insurers. A one-payer system simplifies the enrollment process; it also simplifies the reimbursement process, saving money for the state and making it more attractive to providers.

In its first year, costs per member in "Husky" went down 2 percent, and the number of providers accepting Medicaid increased. While a comprehensive national single-payer system that covers everyone with one standard of care would be far better, a switch to a one-payer Medicaid program in Maryland would be a step in the right direction toward lower health costs and improved access to care.

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Eric Naumburg

The writer is co-chair of the Maryland chapter of Physicians for a National Health Plan.

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