Could Medicaid Have Helped Miami Man Avoid Amputation?

The ulcer on Vincent Adderly鈥檚 right foot started as a small lesion on the tip of his big toe 鈥 a minor injury for many but a serious medical risk for a diabetic.

For Adderly, 46 and uninsured, the lesion meant trips to the emergency room and hours-long waits for a doctor to scrape the wound, bandage it and send him home with a prescription for antibiotics that Adderly said he could not afford.

But two trips to the ER later, the foot ulcer hadn鈥檛 healed and had become more painful. In late May, he went to a different ER. This time, doctors at Memorial Hospital West in Pembroke Pines gave him a grim choice: have the toe partially amputated to prevent a bone infection from spreading, or treat the wound with extended antibiotic therapy and hope for the best.

Adderly chose the amputation, a decision that put him on the front lines of a fight raging in Tallahassee this week over Medicaid expansion. If Medicaid were expanded in Florida 鈥 as provided for in the Affordable Care Act, but opposed by many Republicans 鈥 Adderly would likely qualify. And if he鈥檇 had the regular medical care Medicaid can provide, he and some of his doctors believe he might have avoided the amputation.

Vincent Adderly, 46, of Miami Gardens fills out forms in the medical records office at Memorial Hospital West in Pembroke Pines, Fla. on May 28, 2015. He is uninsured and diabetic and was at the hospital following his week- long hospitalization there. Part of the big toe on Adderly’s right foot had to be amputated. (Photo by Marsha Halper/Miami Herald)

鈥淚鈥檓 evidence of time wasted,鈥 said Adderly, who falls into a healthcare no-man鈥檚-land that policy analysts call the . 鈥淭his could have been avoided.鈥

Unemployed since 2008, the Miami Gardens man said chronic back pain from a car accident and spinal fusion, along with diabetes-related complications, have left him unable to work. He earns no income and does not qualify for financial aid to buy health insurance under the ACA, or Obamacare. Because he has no dependent children and is not legally disabled, Adderly also is ineligible for Medicaid in Florida 鈥 one of that have not adopted an expansion plan.

Adderly is among Florida adults, including about 140,000 in Miami-Dade and 80,000 in Broward, who would be newly eligible for Medicaid if the state were to adopt an expansion plan, according to the Urban Institute, a health policy research nonprofit group.

Caught in the coverage gap, Adderly said he has applied for Social Security Disability, which would make him eligible for Medicaid. But he also wants to commit his energies to advocating for Medicaid expansion 鈥 a choice that Florida鈥檚 Legislature has turned down twice already, in 2013 and 2014. The Legislature reconvened Monday in a special, 20-day session to pass a budget. The process broke down this spring over the issue of Medicaid expansion: the Senate offered a plan to help the uninsured that House leaders and Gov. Rick Scott oppose.

鈥淭his special session needs to be a session where they address people who have problems, like myself,鈥 said Adderly, who has enrolled in civic engagement courses through a nonprofit group that advocates for Medicaid expansion, Catalyst Miami. 鈥淲hy should I have to wait on special sessions when it should have been done the first time? If I was afforded the opportunity with Medicaid, or some type of insurance that Obamacare provides, I would have been able to go to a doctor.鈥

Kissinger Goldman, the emergency room doctor who first saw Adderly at Memorial Hospital West in late May, said there鈥檚 plenty of medical evidence that diabetics have better health outcomes when they receive regular care.

鈥淭he only way to do that,鈥欌 he said, 鈥渋s to see a primary doctor who is on top of you, who reminds you to take your medicine, who reminds you to take care of your feet, who reminds you to eat properly.鈥欌

He said that preventive care, the kind emphasized under the ACA, could have helped a patient like Adderly avoid amputation.

鈥淚 see what happens when you don鈥檛 get preventive care,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淵ou come to me in the emergency room.鈥欌

Florida Rep. Carlos Trujillo, a Miami Republican, said there is no question that Adderly would have benefited from regular visits with a physician.

Trujillo, who opposes healthcare expansion under the ACA, said he also agrees that Adderly would have been better off with Medicaid than being uninsured. But he says those aren鈥檛 the questions dividing the Legislature.

鈥淭he question we鈥檙e debating in Tallahassee,鈥欌 he said, 鈥渋s whether Medicaid is the solution, and is it the responsibility of the state to offer insurance to individuals who have never been subsidized for insurance? 鈥 And if we do, where do we take the money from? Do we take it from education? Do we take it from transportation?

鈥淭here is a cost,鈥欌 he said.

Under the ACA, Medicaid expansion was supposed to bridge the gap between the poorest Americans and those who make enough to qualify for government-subsidized plans. But the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision to make Medicaid expansion optional meant that Florida and 20 other mostly Republican-led states chose not to expand the state-federal insurance program for the poor.

For states that chose to expand eligibility for Medicaid, the health law requires the federal government to pay 100 percent of the cost of the newly eligible population through 2016, and never less than 90 percent thereafter.

According to advocacy groups and some state legislators, including Sen. Rene Garcia, a Hialeah Republican, Florida would receive in federal funding to expand Medicaid.

Trujillo, however, argues that Florida鈥檚 Medicaid costs have grown dramatically over the years, and that the program now accounts for 鈥34 percent鈥 of the state budget. But includes both federal and state dollars. In 2014, that broke down to about $14 billion from the federal government and and about $9.5 billion from the state.

Vincent Adderly, right, a 46-year-old Miami Gardens man who is uninsured and diabetic, walks past an employee at Memorial Hospital West in Pembroke Pines, Fla. on May 28, 2015. (Photo by Marsha Halper/Miami Herald)

Still, Trujillo said, uninsured Floridians such as Adderly need access to healthcare 鈥 but not necessarily Medicaid.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 the best way to get him access? For us, it鈥檚 fighting 鈥 for transparency, for expansion of scope, for reduced costs 鈥 so Vincent can buy good, quality, affordable healthcare rather than end up on Medicaid,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淥r is the solution to expand Medicaid and put people on these programs that not you or I could tell them if they would have a better outcome? It鈥檚 100 percent speculation.鈥

For Adderly, though, there is no guesswork about his need for regular medical care. There is only uncertainty about how to get there, and an urgency to act while there鈥檚 still a chance in the Legislature.

鈥淚鈥檓 feeling concerned,鈥 Adderly said of the chances for Medicaid expansion in Florida. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 even more determined to make this happen in Florida because there鈥檚 no more time to waste. … I鈥檓 an example of what happens when you wait.鈥

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