• A clinic blames its closing on Trump's Medicaid cuts. Patients don't bu

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 15 20:15:18 2025
    XPost: nebr.news.general, talk.politics.medicine, alt.politics.trump
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.politics.republicans

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/07/13/trump-tax-bill- medicaid-rural/

    CURTIS, Nebraska � The only health clinic here is shutting down, and the hospital CEO has blamed Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump�s
    signature legislation. But residents of Curtis � a one-stoplight town in deep-red farm country � aren�t buying that explanation.

    �Anyone who�s saying that Medicaid cuts is why they�re closing is a liar,� April Roberts said, as she oversaw lunch at the Curtis Area Senior Center.

    The retirees trickling in for fried chicken and soft-serve ice cream will
    be hit hardest when the clinic closes this fall, Roberts fears. Seniors
    who sometimes go in multiple times a month to have blood drawn will have
    to drive 40 miles to the next nearest health center. Sick people, she
    worries, will put off checkups and get sicker.

    Arriving for lunch, retired Navy veteran Jim Christensen said he�d read an op-ed that �tried to blame everything on Trump.�

    �Horse feathers,� he said, dismissing the idea.

    Curtis has become an early test case of the politics of Trump�s agenda in
    rural America, where voters vulnerable to Medicaid cuts in Trump�s �One
    Big Beautiful Bill� law are reluctant to blame the president or
    congressional Republicans who approved it. Many people in Curtis have
    directed their frustration at their hospital system instead of their representatives in Washington.

    Democrats and health care advocates are pointing to the town � population
    806 in the last census � as a first casualty of Republicans� health care overhaul. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) and others have referred to the
    town on social media as a model of what�s to come for rural hospitals
    around the country. Close to half of rural hospitals nationwide already
    lose money, and analysts expect Trump�s tax and spending law to add more strain.

    Community Hospital, the nonprofit that runs the clinic known as the Curtis Medical Center and a couple of other facilities in the region, plunged
    into the center of that national story when it announced on July 2 � one
    day before the bill�s passage � that a confluence of factors had made its Curtis outpost unsustainable. It cited years-long financial challenges, inflation and �anticipated federal budget cuts to Medicaid,� the public
    health insurance program for lower-income and disabled Americans.

    On Thursday morning, 73-year-old Sharon Jorgensen was scared the clinic
    had already shut its doors: She called and couldn�t get someone to pick
    up. She needed a blood draw, so she went to the health center to see if
    someone was still there.

    It was open, after all. And now staff had a date for the closure.

    �We have until Sept. 30,� Jorgensen told another local, 63-year-old Jo
    Popp, on her way out of the small brick building. �I have to find a
    doctor. I don�t have a doctor!�

    Popp would have to start taking a day off work for checkups, because of
    the drive. But she said she would try to follow the clinic�s nurse
    practitioner � one of three people on staff � wherever she went.

    �She knows us,� Jorgensen said.

    �Right,� Popp said. �She listens to us.�

    The clinic has been here longer than many people in town can remember, and people are struggling to make sense of the shutdown. The changes coming
    for Medicaid are complicated, and some won�t take effect for years, which
    makes the timing even harder for residents to understand.

    Many know that Trump�s bill will impose work requirements for Medicaid recipients, which seems reasonable to them, and some think � inaccurately
    � that the legislation was designed to end Medicaid coverage for
    undocumented immigrants. (An earlier version of the bill penalized states
    for using their own funds � separate from Medicaid � to insure the undocumented; that provision was stripped from the final bill on a technicality).

    Community Hospital was already losing money, and officials said they are
    trying to make sure they remain financially viable for the 30,000 people
    they serve throughout their facilities. But the timing of their decision
    to announce the Curtis closure has stoked suspicions in the town, leaving
    some residents convinced their health provider was using the president as
    a scapegoat.

    Popp, a three-time Trump voter, thought the president was cutting wasteful spending and didn�t think he caused the closure. Jorgensen, a registered Republican who never voted for Trump, was frustrated that so few of her neighbors believed the Medicaid cuts played a role.

    �They�re huge Trumpers � and so it doesn�t matter what he does � there�s
    an excuse for it,� Jorgensen said. The retired corn and cattle farmer was
    used to being the odd one out in Frontier County, where 86 percent of the
    vote went to Trump last fall.

    One of those Trump supporters walked out of the clinic.

    �My heart�s good,� he told Jorgensen.

    �Yay!� Jorgensen said.

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    Trump repeatedly promised this year that he would not cut Medicaid. He
    expanded the GOP tent to include more low-income voters without college degrees, and some Republicans warned that any reduction in benefits would undercut their pitch that they are the new party of the working class.

    But Trump and Republican lawmakers needed to offset some of the enormous
    cost of the tax cuts, deportations and other campaign promises in their
    tax and spending law. So they turned to Medicaid. The nonpartisan
    Congressional Budget Office has estimated that about 12 million people
    will lose health coverage because of the law, which is nonetheless
    projected to add trillions to the federal debt over the next decade.

    Republicans say that changes like work requirements will reduce fraud and ensure Medicaid is available for those it was originally intended to
    serve, including pregnant women and the disabled. But researchers warn
    those requirements will create onerous paperwork that, in practice, will prevent eligible people from getting their benefits.

    Other changes in the law will disadvantage the vast majority of states
    that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, according to
    hospital groups and policy analysts, and will reduce payments to rural hospitals by reining in a financing mechanism they have long relied on to
    boost federal funds.

    KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research organization, estimates the bill would cause federal Medicaid spending in rural areas to drop by $155
    billion � more than the $50 billion lawmakers set aside in the legislation
    to shore up rural hospitals. It�s not fully clear how that $50 billion
    will be divided, adding to providers� uncertainty.

    Community Hospital declined to comment in detail on its financial picture
    but said in a statement that �to ensure long-term sustainability, we must prioritize what lies ahead.�

    �They�re projecting where they�re going to be at over the next couple of
    years, and if it�s between jeopardizing the hospital or closing down a
    clinic, they�re going to close a clinic,� said Jed Hansen, the executive director of the Nebraska Rural Health Association, who expects about
    100,000 Nebraskans to lose health care as a result of the law.

    Rural health care facilities run on thin margins to serve small
    communities in far-flung locations. And they tend to have more patients on Medicaid, many of them self-employed farmers, small business owners and seasonal workers more likely to need public insurance. Hospital groups and executives have warned that some rural hospitals that long operated at a
    loss won�t be able to stay open much longer, now that the Medicaid cuts
    have been voted in.

    Nationwide, far more people oppose Trump�s bill than support it in
    polling, and Democrats hope the legislation will cost the GOP control of
    the House in the 2026 midterms.

    Even in Curtis, some unease at the Medicaid cuts is percolating.

    �I�m not in agreement with this bill,� said 61-year-old Brenda Wheeler, a Republican who voted for Trump in 2016 but then soured on him and sat out
    last year�s election. She was thinking about changing her registration to independent, upset at the cuts to Medicaid.

    �When we talked about making America great again, I don�t think this is
    what we all had in mind,� she said, as she stopped by the clinic.

    Down the road on the town�s main street lined with American flags, Kerri
    Kemp said she didn�t like the Medicaid cuts either. The 47-year-old got Medicaid coverage after Nebraska voters chose to expand eligibility for
    the program in 2018, adopting an optional part of President Barack Obama�s health care overhaul. But it was hard to document all her work as a
    bartender, county worker and rancher, and recently she�d struggled to
    submit the paperwork. Now she is uninsured.

    Work requirements could make it harder to qualify when they take effect in 2027, just after the 2026 midterms. But Kemp, a lifelong Republican and
    Trump supporter, doesn�t hold that against Trump and suggested he might
    change course. �I really think he�s gonna do something,� she said.

    Sitting at his desk across the street � next to a miniature Trump head and
    a small red punching bag labeled �Obama stress reliever� � Curtis Mayor
    Brad Welch called Community Hospital�s comments on federal funding �irresponsible.�

    �I don�t think the signing of the �Big Beautiful Bill� had one thing to do
    with the closure of this clinic,� Welch said.

    Community Hospital officials said they had tried to find another group to
    take over the clinic, without luck. But the city administrator, Andrew
    Lee, was still hopeful. Roberts, the senior center director, wondered if a hospital 40 miles to the north could be persuaded.

    �Maybe we need to talk to Andrew about really going and schmoozing them
    and trying to get them to come down here,� she told a senior who stopped
    by the counter to get some fried chicken to take home.

    �Do something,� the woman echoed. �I mean, it�s really too bad.�


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