TennCare seeks $975M in additional funding tied to medical costs, price of new obesity drugs

Demand for semiglutide drugs like Ozempic, which is used to treat heart disease, diabetes and obesity, is a factor in TennCare’s request for a budget boost. (Photo illustration by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

TennCare – the state Medicaid program that pays the medical bills of 1.4 million low-income Tennesseans – is seeking a $975 million budget boost next year driven in large part by rising medical costs,

The two biggest drivers of the expected costs are an estimated $165 million in price hikes for medical care and $41 million tied to the high price tag of new classes of drugs used to treat obesity, heart disease and diabetes – drugs such as Ozempic.

This year’s budget request follows steep cuts in TennCare enrollment: 300,000 people lost coverage last year in an error-ridden process that  violated the rights of thousands of Tennesseans and ran afoul of the Constitution, Medicaid law and protections for people with disabilities, a federal judge ruled in August.

It also follows the controversial announcement by Gov. Bill Lee that $100 million in TennCare funding will be distributed in the form of no-interest loans to East Tennessee counties to remove debris and fix water and wastewater plants that suffered extensive hurricane damage in September.

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