Opinion Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the author/producer鈥檚 interpretation of facts and data.
California Shouldn鈥檛 Ration Care for Disabled Kids
Medically fragile children belong at home with their families, not in institutions. To make that possible, these children need support, especially if they depend on life-sustaining medical equipment such as ventilators, IVs, or feeding tubes. In the hospital, these children receive round-the-clock care from doctors and nurses. At home, they still need nursing care.
But a critical program that medically fragile children depend on to get at-home care is broken, leaving families desperate. This is a medical and developmental emergency for children with disabilities, and California needs to act quickly to fix it.
California has some of the most robust programs to support kids with disabilities who are living at home. Kids who are eligible for Medi-Cal, California鈥檚 health insurance program for low-income families and people with disabilities, can access private-duty nursing care, medical day care programs, paid family care through In-Home Supportive Services, and specialty care through California Children鈥檚 Services. Private health insurance鈥攖he kind that people have through employment鈥攄oesn鈥檛 pay for long-term care. Medi-Cal is the only program that pays for the kind of ongoing care that medically fragile children need to live at home. California has a waiver program that allows these children to access Medi-Cal. The problem is, it鈥檚 full. That means children who need access to this program are languishing on a waitlist instead of getting the care they need.
This is rationing and discriminatory鈥攖he state has made a budget decision to ration the care that disabled people need to live at home. There is no moral defense for this kind of rationing. We can鈥檛 call ourselves a progressive state if medically fragile children and adults can鈥檛 get the care they need to stay out of institutions.
Waivers are a way for states to provide extra services to people who have special care needs, or to provide Medi-Cal eligibility to people who wouldn鈥檛 otherwise qualify. For disabled, medically fragile children, the Home and Community-Based Alternatives (HCBA) Waiver allows middle-class children to access Medi-Cal programs, like home nursing care.
On July 12, the state announced that the HCBA waiver was at capacity, and that any new applications would be put on a waitlist. The program has a capacity limit of 8,974 people鈥攖hat means that in a state of 40 million people, a tiny fraction (.02%) of people can access it. As of September, there were 3,233 people on the waitlist. What does it mean to be on the waitlist? It means that instead of providing access to care, the state puts your name on a list of people who need care. There are rules in place that bump medically fragile children to the top of the waitlist鈥攂ut that isn鈥檛 a real solution. The solution is that there shouldn鈥檛 be a waitlist at all.
Michelle Zapata鈥檚 15-month-old son Oliver is one of the medically fragile children who is locked out of getting the care he needs because he鈥檚 on the waitlist. Oliver was born with a complex heart defect that couldn鈥檛 be surgically corrected until he was 7 months old. Even after the surgery, the defect is not fully resolved. He still needs medications to keep his heart from working too hard. He came home from the NICU at 2 months old, with a feeding tube and a need for round-the-clock feedings and medications to manage his heart condition.
When Oliver came home from the hospital in 2022, the waiver was functional鈥攂ut he fell through the cracks. No one at the hospital told Michelle that her son qualified for private-duty nursing care or the waiver. This has been a longstanding problem with the program鈥攅ven during the years the waiver was functional, it was a tiny program that wasn鈥檛 well connected with hospital-discharge-planning teams. If the hospital had referred Oliver to the program when he left the NICU in 2022, he would have been enrolled while it was still operational. Michelle learned about the waiver through an acquaintance and applied in August of 2023, after the program stopped taking new enrollments.
Michelle works as a nurse practitioner, and her husband works for the government. They鈥檙e a middle-class family with private health insurance鈥攂ut their health insurance doesn鈥檛 pay for private-duty nursing care. That means Michelle is responsible for all of Oliver鈥檚 complex medical care.
鈥淚鈥檓 a bedside nurse 24/7 with my son, [and] on top of that I have my own job,鈥 she told me.
Without nursing help at home, Michelle has to rely on Oliver鈥檚 grandparents for help so that she can work. Oliver鈥檚 grandmother accidentally gave him too much medication one day鈥7 mL instead of 0.7 mL鈥攂ecause the labels, syringes, and instructions all had very small print. Medication errors are easy to make, especially for people with no medical training taking care of a fragile infant. Thankfully, Oliver was OK鈥攂ut he still doesn鈥檛 have access to the professional nursing care he needs to reduce the risk of untrained family members making future errors.
If Oliver could enroll in the waiver program, he would also be able to attend Loretta鈥檚 Little Miracles, a pediatric, daytime health program where nurses take care of kids who have complex medical care needs.
The irony of the situation isn鈥檛 lost on Michelle. 鈥淚 work in health care鈥擨 work in the system that I can鈥檛 even get access to,鈥 she says.
For Oliver to qualify for Medi-Cal without the waiver, Michelle and her husband would have to quit their jobs, which would be economically disastrous for the family.
This dysfunction in the HBCA waiver program comes at an especially dangerous time for medically fragile children. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, children remained eligible for Medi-Cal even if their parents didn鈥檛 complete renewal paperwork. Then, in April 2023, California restarted Medi-Cal redeterminations, which means that families who are over the income limit to qualify without a waiver will be disenrolled. Some of these families have children who are receiving private-duty nursing care without a waiver because they qualified for Medi-Cal when family income was lower. Normally, when a child has a serious disability, they still qualify for home nursing through the HCBA waiver even if their family鈥檚 income increases. But because of the waiting list, they鈥檒l instead lose access to care. This could force parents of medically fragile children to drop out of the workforce to take care of them, or to choose unsafe care arrangements that put the child at risk of injury or death so they can keep working. Parents with no other options may have to make the devastating choice to put medically fragile children into .
This crisis doesn鈥檛 just affect medically fragile children. Adults who need nursing care at home are also on the HCBA waitlist. The HCBA waiver is a true lifespan program: It provides care for ventilator-dependent infants, toddlers who use parenteral nutrition, children who are on peritoneal dialysis pending kidney transplants, teenagers with muscular dystrophy, young adults who have been paralyzed, adults with ALS and other neurological syndromes, and elderly people with dementia.
Right now, the HCBA waiver is a zero-sum game鈥攖he people on the waitlist are waiting for people currently enrolled in the program to die in order to get care. The state is supposed to have a 鈥渢riage鈥 process for the waitlist that prioritizes some applications over others, but the rules on how that will work and when enrollments will restart haven鈥檛 been released. Disabled people who need care are drowning; we shouldn鈥檛 have to agonize over who gets a spot on the lifeboat鈥攚e can build a bigger boat.
California doesn鈥檛 put a limit on how many sick people can get care in hospitals or nursing homes. California has a similar waiver program for people with developmental disabilities called the Home and Community-Based Services for the Developmentally Disabled (HCBS-DD) Waiver, which doesn鈥檛 have a capacity limit. But for complicated budget reasons, California sets a limit on how many children and adults with medically intensive disabilities can get nursing care at home, and it鈥檚 a very low limit.
It also makes no economic sense. Warehousing disabled people in hospitals and nursing homes costs the state orders-of-magnitude more than just providing nursing care at home. When vulnerable people can鈥檛 access nursing care at home, the state spends millions on unnecessary hospitalizations.
The state has committed to providing enhanced case management and community supports for people who are at risk of institutionalization, or trying to come home from an institution. But with the HCBA waiver at capacity, California鈥檚 promise of wraparound services for the most medically complex patients is hollow.
California can fix this by immediately funding 50,000 slots for the HCBA waiver and eliminating ongoing capacity limits. This isn鈥檛 a problem that can wait until the next budget cycle for a solution. Californians who need care today can鈥檛 get it. Families are having to make gut-wrenching decisions: Do their children stay in the hospital, where they have access to medical care but not family life, or do they bring their children home without adequate support? Waiver capacity is set to increase to 10,081 slots in January of 2025 (or perhaps sooner). That鈥檚 not enough capacity to handle the people who are currently on the waitlist, or the people who will apply between now and then.
California has made an indefensible decision to ration the care that its most vulnerable residents need to live at home. The rationing needs to stop now.
This column was produced in collaboration with the .
Jennifer McLelland
is the California Health Report鈥檚 disability rights columnist. She also serves as the policy director for home- and community-based services at Little Lobbyists, a family-led group that advocates for and with children with complex medical needs and disabilities. She has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in public policy and management from the University of Southern California and a master鈥檚 degree in criminology from California State University, Fresno.
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