Virgin Islands Medicaid Patients Go Without Care As Contracts Linger In Government Bureaucracy
ST. CROIX Many Virgin Islands residents who depend on Medicaid, called Medical Assistance Program (MAP) in the territory, have been unable to receive medical care because a number of Virgin Islands physicians, as of Friday, had yet to receive approval for their MAP provider agreement, email conversations between Senator Nereida Rivera-OReilly, along with Department of Human Services (D.H.S.) and Department of Justice officials have revealed.
The D.H.S. Bureau of Health Insurance and Medical Assistance is the division responsible for administering Medicaid in the Virgin Islands. But for reasons unknown, the government has been slow in approving multiple contracts. Mrs. Rivera-OReilly, in multiple emails last week and over the weekend, assailed government officials for the stalled progress in getting the contracts signed, contending that it sends a message to the U.S. Government and President-elect Donald Trump, that the territory has no use for Medicaid dollars.
I am distraught by the fact that VI physicians are still waiting for approval of their MAP provider agreement. Several applications continue to linger. In the interim people go without access to medical care and our MAP expansion dollars go unspent. So we are essentially sending a message to congress and now Trump that the VI doesnt need MAP money and has no need for improved medical services and access to health care, Mrs. Rivera-OReilly, who was recently reelected to serve in the 32nd Legislature, charged. I am confused. I am confounded. I am fit to be tied. I am at the end of the proverbial rope. Either do your job or move aside and let someone else capable and willing do it. I am tired of hearing the same complaints and excuses. I need a response.
Mrs. Rivera-OReilly inquired about the status of VI Equicares contract, and mentioned at least one doctors contract that was in limbo. Founded in 1997, VI Equicare is the largest independent preferred provider organization in the U.S. Virgin Islands, with a goal to increase the availability of affordable healthcare in the territory, according to a blurb on the About Us page of the firms website. Furthermore, the company provides a single contracting authority for a wide range of medical initiatives for insurance carriers, third party administrators, employers, and the cruise line industry. Within its network of healthcare providers, VI Equicare performs a number of service and organizational functions including credentialing, education and information, quality assurance, and communication, according to information on the companys website.
Read more: http://viconsortium.com/health/vi-medicaid-patients-go-without-care-as-contracts-linger-in-government-bureaucracy/