Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters: Medi-Cal Overhaul Sounds Good on Paper
dan_walters
By Dan Walters, CalMatters Commentary
Published 4 years ago on
February 15, 2021

Share

State officials are fond of giving their high-concept — and expensive — new programs snappy, one-word acronyms derived from much-longer and often awkward official titles.

Thus, for example, the Financial Information System for California is shortened to become FI$Cal.

Dan Walters

Opinion

Unfortunately, officials are often more adept at dreaming up names for new programs than at making them function — and FI$Cal has become a poster child for expensive dysfunction.

What looked good on paper — consolidating all of the state’s financial data — just hasn’t worked out in practice so far. It’s been underway for many years, with completion deadlines constantly missed, drawing sharp criticism from watchdogs such as state Auditor Elaine Howle.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is proposing another big program that looks good on paper — reworking Medi-Cal, the massive health care program for low-income Californians that costs about $125 billion a year and serves more than a third of the state’s 40 million residents.

Its official name is California Advancing and Innovating Medi-Cal and its acronym is CalAIM. It’s another attempt at consolidation aimed (get it?) at better and less expensive care for “high-risk, high-need” enrollees who are small in number but consume a major chunk of Medi-Cal’s resources.

Use of Medi-Cal Resources

The costliest 1% of Medi-Cal’s enrollees account for about 20% of its spending, and the neediest 20% consume about 70% of its budget.

Who are they?

“Past research indicates that the highest-cost enrollees typically are being treated for multiple chronic conditions (such as diabetes or heart failure) and often have mental health or substance use disorders,” the Legislature’s budget adviser, Gabe Petek, says in one analysis of CalAIM. “Costs for this population often are driven by frequent hospitalizations and high prescription drug costs. In some cases, social factors like homelessness play a role in the high utilization of these enrollees.”

“Today, some Medi-Cal enrollees may need to access six or more separate delivery systems, including managed care, fee-for-service, mental health, substance use disorder, dental, developmental, and/or In-Home Supportive Services,” Newsom’s recently unveiled 2021-22 budget declares. “Fragmentation of service delivery increases the need for care coordination, increases complexity, and results in greater health inequities.”

CalAIM would expand “managed care,” in which contractors are paid flat fees to provide medical care to about 80% of current enrollees, to a wider array of services, including housing assistance, for the neediest cohort. In theory, it “will have significant impacts on individuals’ health and quality of life and through iterative system transformation, (it) will ultimately reduce health care costs over time,” as the budget puts it.

As stated earlier, combining separate service delivery systems into a one-stop shop does sound good on paper. But as also noted earlier, California has had many programs that sounded good on paper only to fail to deliver the promised benefits.

Past Promises Not Kept

In fact, we’re experiencing one of them right now. For months, state, county and private health care groups worked on an elaborate plan to roll out vaccinations for COVID-19 on a strict priority basis.

Newsom repeatedly promised that when vaccines became available, the priority list, starting with front-line health care workers dealing with COVID-19 patients, would rule.

However, when vaccine became available, the plan almost immediately exploded and ever since vaccine distribution and utilization has been a scramble with ever-changing, confusing rules.

We should be, therefore, skeptical of CalAIM’s lofty promises of getting more bang for the buck. Legislative Analyst Petek is wisely urging the Legislature to proceed cautiously and with an abundance of oversight.

We really don’t need another programmatic meltdown.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

[activecampaign form=19]

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Man Killed in Head-On Collision Identified

DON'T MISS

California Allocates $56 Million to Combat Youth Homelessness

DON'T MISS

Let the Hunt for Fresno County Fruit Trail Delights Begin!

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect in Southwest Shooting Through Valley Crime Stoppers’ Tip

DON'T MISS

18 Injured in Knife Attack in Hamburg, Report Says

DON'T MISS

White House National Security Council Hit by More Firings, Sources Say

DON'T MISS

All Six People Aboard Plane That Crashed in San Diego Confirmed Dead

DON'T MISS

Explore the Wild Side of Route 66 With These Natural Wonders

DON'T MISS

Billy Joel Cancels Touring After Being Diagnosed With a Brain Disorder

DON'T MISS

Justice Department Reaches Deal to Allow Boeing to Avoid Prosecution Over 737 Max Crashes

UP NEXT

Test Your Memorial Day Knowledge With This Quiz

UP NEXT

Gavin Newsom’s Off-the-Mark Budget Numbers Undermine His Credibility Again

UP NEXT

The Trump-Supporting Christians Accusing Jews of Antisemitism

UP NEXT

Congress Debates Two Issues With Big CA Implications: EVs, Taxes

UP NEXT

Newsom’s Budget Cuts Anger Allies and Leave the State’s Chronic Deficit Unresolved

UP NEXT

The Tragedy of Joe Biden

UP NEXT

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

UP NEXT

Democratic Candidates for CA Governor Shy Away From State’s Anti-Oil Crusade

UP NEXT

Trump Navigates Iran Nuclear Talks. Should US Insist on Zero Enrichment?

UP NEXT

Fresno, Wake Up. We’re Numb to Our DUI Problem

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect in Southwest Shooting Through Valley Crime Stoppers’ Tip

7 hours ago

18 Injured in Knife Attack in Hamburg, Report Says

8 hours ago

White House National Security Council Hit by More Firings, Sources Say

8 hours ago

All Six People Aboard Plane That Crashed in San Diego Confirmed Dead

8 hours ago

Explore the Wild Side of Route 66 With These Natural Wonders

9 hours ago

Billy Joel Cancels Touring After Being Diagnosed With a Brain Disorder

9 hours ago

Justice Department Reaches Deal to Allow Boeing to Avoid Prosecution Over 737 Max Crashes

9 hours ago

Fresno County Wildland Fire Burns One Acre Before Being Contained

10 hours ago

Clovis Church’s ‘Giving Truck’ Offers Free Coffee With a Twist

11 hours ago

Should Fresno Make It Easier to Convert Office Buildings Into Housing?

11 hours ago

Fresno County Man Killed in Head-On Collision Identified

A 20-year-old Raisin City man was killed early Thursday morning in a head-on collision north of Huntsman Avenue, according to the California...

6 hours ago

fresno
6 hours ago

Fresno County Man Killed in Head-On Collision Identified

6 hours ago

California Allocates $56 Million to Combat Youth Homelessness

7 hours ago

Let the Hunt for Fresno County Fruit Trail Delights Begin!

A Valley Crimes Stoppers tip and surveillance footage led Fresno police to arrest Andy Ramos on Thursday, May 22, 2025, who confessed to a May 11 shooting that left a man hospitalized in stable condition. (Fresno PD)
7 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect in Southwest Shooting Through Valley Crime Stoppers’ Tip

Police officers and forensic experts work at Hamburg's main train station, after several people were injured in a knife attack, in Hamburg, Germany, May 23, 2025. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer
8 hours ago

18 Injured in Knife Attack in Hamburg, Report Says

A view of the White House in Washington, U.S., July 20, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt/File Photo
8 hours ago

White House National Security Council Hit by More Firings, Sources Say

Emergency personnel work at the crash scene on a street, after a small civilian aircraft went down in a military neighborhood in San Diego, California, U.S. May 22, 2025. REUTERS/Mike Blake
8 hours ago

All Six People Aboard Plane That Crashed in San Diego Confirmed Dead

9 hours ago

Explore the Wild Side of Route 66 With These Natural Wonders

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend