Amid Anchor Medical Closure, Gov. Dan McKee Rolls Out Primary Care Reforms

But Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha calls the governor’s plan “half-baked”

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee, flanked by members of his Health Care System Planning Cabinet.
David Wright / The Public’s Radio
2 min read
Share
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee, flanked by members of his Health Care System Planning Cabinet.
David Wright / The Public’s Radio
Amid Anchor Medical Closure, Gov. Dan McKee Rolls Out Primary Care Reforms
Copy

The impending closure of Anchor Medical Associates means some 25,000 Rhode Islanders will soon be forced to find new doctors.

And the state already has a shortage of primary care doctors. As many as 400,000 Rhode Islanders already have no access to primary care.

The closure of a trusted practice highlights a growing crisis in Rhode Island’s healthcare system — with long waitlists, aging doctors, and patients left behind

That’s the problem Gov. Dan McKee hopes to alleviate.

“We know that it is alarming when people in the state of Rhode Island are unable to find a primary care doctor and we are going to do everything possible to connect them with the help they are looking for,” McKee said.

On Tuesday, the governor highlighted a series of steps he and his Health Care System Planning Cabinet are working on.

Among the proposed changes:

  • Accelerating a proposed review of Medicaid reimbursement rates
  • Requiring commercial insurers to double their spending on primary care by 2029.
  • Demanding a 20% reduction in prior authorization requirements to make it easier for Rhode Islanders to get urgent care.
  • Creating a $5 million state grant to encourage the hiring of additional doctors and nurses.

Expanding the student loan forgiveness program for health care professionals who commit to practicing in the state for at least two years after they graduate.

Many of the proposed changes would likely not take effect until Fiscal Year 2027 at the soonest.

Dr. Elizabeth Lange, a pediatrician with Waterman Pediatrics in East Providence, applauded the governor’s initiative.

“We can always do more,” she said. “So I’m appreciative of what people are doing now.”

“There is never enough to fix every problem that’s going on in the state,” she said. “There are many problems even beyond health care, and all of them are important.”

Rhode Island attorney general Peter Neronha was a good deal more critical, dismissing the governor’s action plan as little more than “bureaucratic nonsense and Tuesday-morning lip service.”

Neronha accused the governor of presenting “a slapdash response” to a political crisis.

As for Anchor Medical, which plans to close all its Rhode Island operations in the next several months, state officials said they are working with the company to help coordinate patient transfers.

But officials said it has been difficult to determine exactly how many of Anchor Medical’s patients need help finding new doctors.

McKee insisted his plan is a step in the right direction.

“We intend to take this very seriously,” he said. “We know that there are issues that individual households are dealing with right now, and we are trying to have a broad-based strategy.”

The investigation previously covered activities at the Warren Alpert Medical School and is now expanded to the entire university from the period of Oct. 7, 2023 to the present
After years of debate, Rhode Island lawmakers unveil competing bottle bills aiming to boost recycling and cut litter — but retailers remain wary and questions linger over logistics
Mayor Smiley unveils an ambitious roadmap to reclaim Providence schools from state control, but state education officials say the plan lacks clarity and collaboration
Backed by youth advocacy groups, a new bill would mandate ethnic studies in all public RI high schools by 2026, aiming to reflect the diverse histories of the state’s student population
The news comes a few days after the Rhode Island School of Design announced the State Department had revoked one of its international student’s visas
The Rhode Island nonprofit is determined to keep going despite the funding crisis caused by the dismantling of USAID