California was ordered by a court to provide Medi-Cal coverage to poor people who are HIV-positive but who haven’t been diagnosed with AIDS, said a nonprofit organization that had sued the state. A Superior Court judge in Los Angeles found that California’s Department of Health Care Services must comply with a 2002 state law intended to extend Medi-Cal benefits to people with HIV, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation said Tuesday in a statement. Medi-Cal is the California Medicaid program that provides health-care services to low-income people.
Before the 2002 law, only HIV positive people who had developed AIDS were eligible for Medi-Cal, according to the statement.
Implementing the bill wasn’t possible in a “cost neutral environment,” Anthony Cava, a spokesman for the Department of Health Care Services in Sacramento, said in an e-mailed statement.
“The law was very clear that it should not be implemented if the costs could not be offset by savings,” Cava said. The department “will continue to work with its partners to implement the law in a cost-neutral manner, just as the legislature intended.” Source Bloomberg.
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