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Tuesday, December 03, 2024
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Proposed healthcare solutions don’t work for Alachua County, experts say

<p><span>Former Executive Director of We Care Manatee Victoria Kasdan (left) and group CEO of Florida Medical Center and Tenet Health Miami-Dade Group Jeffrey Welch (right) discuss ways Florida can improve its healthcare system during the Florida Priorities Summit. </span></p>

Former Executive Director of We Care Manatee Victoria Kasdan (left) and group CEO of Florida Medical Center and Tenet Health Miami-Dade Group Jeffrey Welch (right) discuss ways Florida can improve its healthcare system during the Florida Priorities Summit. 

When it comes to improving healthcare, the cellphone in your pocket might just be one of the keys to progress — or it could act as a bandage covering the real problem. 

More than 30 business people, education leaders, public administrators and other state influencers met Nov. 18 at the University of Miami to discuss state issues, including healthcare. Their recommendations will be submitted to the Florida Legislature once the new legislative session begins Jan. 14.

Hosted by the Miami Herald, the second annual Florida Priorities Summit healthcare panel comprised of five industry leaders involved with hospital care, health insurance and Medicaid, advised the legislature to focus on communication about existing resources. The methods they suggested include developing video chat or telephone-facilitated healthcare, public service announcements for cheap medicine and medical resource directories instead of medicare.

But experts in Alachua County don’t think these new measures will do much to help those with inadequate or no health insurance in the area. 

Victoria Kasdan, panel member and former executive director of the free healthcare organization We Care Manatee in Manatee, Florida, said focusing on measures such as PSAs is a more realistic approach due to the lower costs and political pressure; However, it won’t have long-term effects.

“It’s easier than trying to get them to pass a law,” she said. “Expand Medicaid? They’re not going to do that, so we’re not even talking about it.” 

Grant Harrell, medical director of UF’s Mobile Outreach Clinic, said he disagrees with the claims Medicaid doesn’t need to expand. 

The mobile clinic is a large bus with medical examination rooms and a lab that drives around Alachua County to provide healthcare for free. It serves about 3,000 patients yearly, most of whom suffer from poverty, homelessness or unemployment, Harrell said. 

“That’s basically us trying to do our best with the dysfunctional health system that we have,” he said. “But that’s not a way of solving the problem.”

Out of those under 65, about 10 percent of America’s population is uninsured. In Alachua County that number is 11.9 percent and statewide it’s 16 percent, according to U.S. Census Bureau data

The clinic bus is dependent on grants instead of a steady stream of government funds. One grant comes from the Community Health Offering Innovative Care & Educational Services (CHOICES) trust fund, which hands out $465,000 annually to eight agencies and 10 programs that provide healthcare in Alachua County, said Choices Program Manager Cindy Bishop. 

The CHOICES fund is provided by money generated from a Florida sales tax for healthcare needs, which was suspended in 2011. Now, there is no source replenishing the fund, and it will run out in five or six years, Bishop said. 

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Alachua County has tried some of the Florida Priorities Summit’s proposed solutions before. UF Professor Laura Guyer, a former hospital nutritionist, spearheaded the Alachua County Community Health and Social Service Resource Guide in 2016. The guide shows residents where they can receive free or cheap healthcare in Alachua County, and she and her students update the guide annually, she said.

Guyer didn’t expect it to take off the way it did. Copies were circulated throughout the county and two resource-directing apps based on Guyer’s guide are being developed by the Gainesville city manager and UF’s Equal Access Clinic Network.

While the guide helps the uninsured or underinsured find existing resources, it doesn’t erase the fact that those resources aren’t always enough, she said.

“Those folks who are so unwilling to examine this issue, I just wonder if they’ve ever had a family member unable to find a dentist or a doctor,” she said. “It’s just cruel to make laws that make it unable for people to access care.”

Alachua County is dotted with more than 10 specially adapted clinics that provide low-income people with more affordable healthcare. However, these clinics are often dependent on grant money that is given on a shaky year-to-year basis. 

One recent victim is The Alachua County Organization for Rural Needs (ACORN) Clinic. Guyer, who is also the board’s vice president, said it stopped offering healthcare in September due to budget cuts. It had been open for 45 years. 

Guyer wants lawmakers to consider that the solution might be in equity, not equality. A tall person does not need a box to stand on to see over a fence, but a short person will, she said. 

“People are born into circumstances that are not under their control, and so they are disadvantaged from the beginning,” Guyer said. “If we can’t change somebody’s economic situation — and that’s tough to do — what can we fix to at least make sure that they can be part of the game?”

 

Former Executive Director of We Care Manatee Victoria Kasdan (left) and group CEO of Florida Medical Center and Tenet Health Miami-Dade Group Jeffrey Welch (right) discuss ways Florida can improve its healthcare system during the Florida Priorities Summit. 

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