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How Federalism Could Spur Bipartisan Action On The Uninsured
Health Affairs
March 31, 2004
How Federalism Could Spur Bipartisan Action On The Uninsured
By Henry J. Aaron and Stuart M. Butler
… we share the belief that federally supported state experimentation is apromising way to make progress. States should be allowed to try widely differing solutions with federal financial support under legislated guidelines, including specific protections and measurable goals.
Crafting a single-payer experiment:
ERISA, which exempts self-insured plans from state regulation, is the primary technical obstacle to testing single-payer plans. The political sensitivity to modifications in ERISA is difficult to exaggerate. Anyattempt to carve out an exception from ERISA for state programs to extend coverage would probably doom federal legislation. But states could create”wraparound” plans to cover all who are not currently insured, or even to cover all who are not insured under plans exempted by ERISA from state regulation. While such n arrangement would not be a single-payer plan, it could achieve universal coverage, which is one defining characteristic of single-payer plans, and arguably be sufficient for a valid test. After all, the U.S. health care system is characterized by different subsystems for certain populations and has a form of single-payer coverage for militaryveterans. But of course the real test is whether advocates of single-payer plans regard such a limited arrangement as a fair trial.
http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/hlthaff.w4.168
ERISA compliance:
http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/compliance_assistance.html
Comment: The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)requires employers to meet certain minimum standards in the administration of employee pension and welfare benefit plans.
An important provision of the ERISA regulations is that self-insured plans of large employers be exempt from state regulation. In fact, comprehensive reform proposals, such as the single payer model, are often rejected simply because the design would not comply with existing ERISA regulations since exempt programs would be folded into a state regulated system.
Because of ERISA’s importance in protecting benefit programs, it has achieved the status of being written in stone. Rather than modifying ERISA to comply with new programs, new programs are designed to comply with ERISA regulations. Aaron and Butler are even making the ridiculous suggestion that a proposal that has absolutely no resemblance to the single payer model be tested as a single payer model, in name only, merely to comply with ERISA regulations.
But any law or regulation can be modified. Even the United States Constitution can be amended. Since a single payer system would fulfill essentially all of the reasons that ERISA health benefit regulations exist, while providing even greater additional advantages, modifying ERISA to enable enactment of a single payer system certainly would be a step forward.
The Affordability Crisis in U.S. Health Care
(From the slide presentation of Gerald Shea, Assistant to the President for
Governmental Affairs, AFL-CIO)
Bill Dreher, Deutsche Bank Securities:
“From the perspective of investors, Costco’s benefits ($10/hour starting wage, 90% paid health benefits after 3 months for full-timers, after 6 months for part-time) are overly generous. Public companies need to care for shareholders first. Costco runs its business like it is a private company.” (Wall Street Journal, 3/26/04)
http://www.cmwf.org/programs/insurance/collins_affordability_723.asp
Comment: The Wall Street solution of eliminating employer generosity may be good for business, but it fails to address the problem of ensuring employee access to affordable health care.
A universal, publicly funded and publicly administered health insurance
program would ensure that access while relieving business administrators of this clear conflict of interest, allowing them to more appropriately concentrate their efforts on maximizing profits.
Health Care Reform a Major Campaign Issue for Voters: New Survey
The Commonwealth Fund
March 29, 2004
Health Care Reform a Major Campaign Issue for Voters: New Survey
Percent of adults ages 19-64 with any medical bill problem or outstanding Debt (Problems paying/not able to pay medical bills, contacted by a collection agency for medical bills, had to change way of life to pay bills, or has medical debt being paid off over time)
Income less than $35,000:
62% of uninsured have problems
45% of continuously insured have problems
Income over $35,000:
57% of uninsured have problems
29% of continuously insured have problems
http://www.cmwf.org/media/releases/collins723_hisurvey_release03292004.asp
For the full report:
http://www.cmwf.org/programs/insurance/collins_biennial2003_723.pdf
Comment: For those who are still not convinced that we have a crisis in health care funding, these numbers should be an awakening. Perhaps the most shocking number is the group that is least impacted, those with incomes over $35,000 who are continuously insured. This is mainstream America. These individuals have been relatively complacent since many of them have believed that the crisis in health care coverage has not affected them. But it has. 29% of mainstream America, in spite of continuous health care coverage, have financial problems due to medical bills!
The outrageously wasteful, expensive, and ineffective private health plan industry is no longer providing us with adequate financial security for medical costs. Let’s throw them out and establish our own publicly financed and publicly administered program of health insurance. Now!
Does universal comprehensive insurance encourage unnecessary use?
Canadian Medical Association Journal
January 20, 2004
Does universal comprehensive insurance encourage unnecessary use?
Evidence from Manitoba says “no”
By Noralou P. Roos, Evelyn Forget, Randy Walld and Leonard MacWilliam
Many have argued that escalating health care costs in Canada are exacerbated by the fact that patients face no costs when they visit doctors or use hospital services. A zero price, it is said, leads to unnecessary use of the system.
Various policies focusing on reducing patient demand have been proposed to address this purported overuse – user fees and medical savings accounts being the 2 most popular. All are supposed to work by creating an incentive for people to decide whether their intended use of the health care system is really necessary. We know that user fees are effective in reducing physician visits by those with low economic status, but have little impact on physician use by the more affluent or on hospital use.
Is there any evidence that a universal health care system encourages the less affluent to see physicians more often than necessary? We have already shown that the great majority of people incur few health care expenditures while a small group incurs high expenditures. This report extends our earlier work by first examining the health and socioeconomic characteristics of those in each expenditure group. We then assess whether residents of low-income areas overuse health care services (particularly physicians) relative to their health status.
Results
Although the data suggest that the health of those with lower socioeconomic status is worse than those of higher status at every level of health care expenditure, there was no pattern of higher physician expenditures on those
whose socioeconomic status is lower.
The 70% of the population on which the province spends 10% of its health
care dollars scored well on all health indicators, and the 10% of the population on which 74% of the dollars are spent scored poorly. In each expenditure group, those with lower socioeconomic status had poorer health.
Despite their poorer health, in each expenditure group, residents of the neighbourhoods with the lowest household incomes incurred physician expenditures that were similar to those of residents of wealthier neighbourhoods.
Interpretation
Most residents of Winnipeg are healthy, infrequent users of physicians and hospitals. Those incurring high health care costs are sick by every measure used. These high-cost users are drawn from every neighbourhood and every
socioeconomic group, and their health care expenditures are driven by hospital costs. High-cost users who are residents of low-income neighbourhoods incur more hospital costs. Other research based on review of medical records has shown the acuity levels of hospitalized patients in the lowest socioeconomic group to be just as high as acuity levels of hospitalized patients in higher socioeconomic groups. Hence the greater use of hospitals by residents of low-income neighbourhoods should not be dismissed as “social admissions”; their high use is consistent with their poorer health status.
Physician visits are the one type of health care use where at least the first visit in any episode is strongly influenced by patient behaviour. The Winnipeg data confirm that physician use by low-income groups is already lower than would be expected given their health status (or physician use by high-income groups is higher than one would expect).
The patterns of health care costs that we examined are driven by poor health and hospital expenditures. Policies aimed at reducing patient demands, such as user fees and medical savings accounts, are not likely to reduce overall costs. User fees discourage physician contact, not hospital use. Thus, user fees would discourage preventive contacts, particularly among the poor, a group in which pap smears, childhood immunizations and prenatal care are already known to be underutilized. Since the RAND study demonstrated that user fees discourage patients from seeking both appropriate and inappropriate care, their effects on even the healthy poor would be pernicious.
Physicians are the gatekeepers to hospitals, and the health status of the patient largely drives the decision to admit and, hence, expenditure patterns. Although higher income patients may be more articulate in asking for high-profile surgical treatments, overall those with the poorest health status show the highest hospital use and expenditure rates. There is scope for decreasing hospital expenditures by focusing on evidence-based medicine, physician practice patterns and hospital management. However, user fees and medical savings accounts are unlikely to contribute to this process.
http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/170/2/209?maxtoshow=&eaf
Comment: 70% of the Winnipeg population consumes only 10% of health care costs. For this healthy sector, creating sensitivity to health care costs through user fess or health saving accounts would have a negligible impact on total health care spending since only 10% of the budget would be manipulated.
It should come as no surprise that Canada spends most of its universal health care funds on people in poor health who need health care regardless of socioeconomic status. Since the health care system should be designed to enable access for those with needs, user fees are superfluous for the affluent but would create financial barriers for low income individuals with legitimate health care needs.
This and other studies show that skyrocketing health care costs are not due to healthy people demanding unnecessary care. Consequently, user fees and health savings accounts cannot possibly have a significant impact on controlling health care costs. Reasonable solutions are possible only once the real problems are more precisely defined.
For a brief discussion of some of the true reasons for cost increases and a suggestion for more rational solutions, read PNHP’s written testimony for the House Ways and Means Committee hearing on the Trustees 2004 Report for Medicare:
https://pnhp.org/news/2004/march/pnhps_written_testim.php?page=all
Resolving the Healthcare Crisis
HSAs in FEHBP?
The Washington Post
March 25, 2004
House Panel Hears Concerns About Offering Health Savings Accounts
By Stephen Barr
The House civil service subcommittee plunged into a debate yesterday over whether federal employees and retirees should be offered “health savings accounts” as one of their choices when buying health insurance.
Yesterday’s hearing began with an overview of the FEHBP by Dan Blair, the deputy director of OPM. But the questioning soon turned to the issue of HSAs, with Rep. Jo Ann S. Davis (R-Va.), the subcommittee chairman, asking Blair whether the option might siphon off young people from fee-for-service and other insurance plans.
Blair said OPM did not project a “mass migration” into HSAs based on FEHBP’s
experience in offering “consumer-driven options” since 2002. Consumer-driven
options provide a spending allowance for health care, a free checkup and some other preventive care. But they also are designed to encourage enrollees to hold down medical spending, because they include substantial deductibles when the spending allowance has been used up.
Only 13,151 people have enrolled in consumer-driven plans, Blair said, suggesting that HSAs, if offered, would likely start off with modest enrollment and would not undermine FEHBP’s ability to spread insurance risks across its enrollment — about 9 million Americans.
But Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) repeatedly challenged Blair and contended that young people would be drawn to the tax savings provided by
HSAs — splitting FEHBP’s “risk pool.” If that trend developed, Blair said, OPM would step in and redesign the program so that no insurance plans would
be stuck with a higher share of the ailing and sick.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A22467-2004Mar24.html
Comment: How would you redesign an insurance program that has concentrated high cost individuals into a separate risk pool? Wouldn’t it be more logical to design the program so that it would prevent risk segmentation?
The Medicare Muddle
The Medicare Muddle
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: March 26, 2004
In advance of Tuesday’s reports by the Social Security and Medicare trustees, some credulous journalists wrote stories based on tips from advocates of Social Security privatization, who claimed that the report would offer a radically downgraded vision of the system’s future. False alarm: projections for Social Security are about the same as last year. Projections for Medicare, however, have worsened: last year the trustees predicted that the hospital insurance trust fund would last until 2026, and now they’ve moved it back to 2019.
How should we react to this news?
It has become standard practice among privatizers to talk as if there is some program called Socialsecurity and medicare. They hope to use scary numbers about future medical costs to panic us into abandoning a retirement program that’s actually in pretty good shape. But the deteriorated outlook for Medicare says nothing, one way or another, about either the sustainability of Social Security (no problem) or the desirability of private retirement accounts (a lousy idea.)
Even on Medicare, don’t panic. It’s not like a private health plan that will go belly up when it runs out of money; it’s just a government program, albeit one supported by a dedicated tax. Nobody thinks America’s highways will be doomed if the gasoline tax, which currently pays for highway maintenance, falls short of the system’s needs ā if politicians want to sustain the system, they will. The same is true of Medicare. Rising medical costs are a very big budget issue, but 2019 isn’t a drop-dead date.
The trustees’ report does, however, give one more reason to hate the prescription drug bill the administration rammed through Congress last year. If deception, intimidation, abuse of power and giveaways to drug companies aren’t enough, it turns out that the bill also squanders taxpayer money on H.M.O.’s.
A little background: conservatives have never mounted an attack on Medicare as systematic as their effort to bully the public into privatizing Social Security. They do, however, often talk about Medicare “reform.” What this amounts to, in practice, is a drive to replace the traditional system, in which Medicare pays doctors and hospitals directly, with a system in which Medicare subcontracts that role to private H.M.O.’s.
In 1997 Congress tried to take a big step in that direction, requiring Medicare to pay per-person fees to private health plans that accepted Medicare recipients. There was much talk about the magic of the marketplace: private plans, so the theory went, would be far more efficient than government bureaucrats, offering better health care at lower cost.
What actually happened was that private plans skimmed the cream, accepting only relatively healthy retirees. Yet Medicare paid them slightly more per retiree than it spent on traditional benefits. In other words, instead of saving money by subcontracting its role to private plans, Medicare was in effect required to pay H.M.O.’s a hefty subsidy.
The only thing that kept this “reform” from being a fiscal disaster was the fact that after an initial rush into the Medicare business, many H.M.O.’s pulled out again. It turns out that private plans are much less efficient than the government at providing health insurance because they have much higher overhead. Even with a heavy subsidy, they can’t compete with traditional Medicare.
There’s a lesson in this experience. Sometimes there’s no magic in the free market ā in fact, it can be a hindrance. Health insurance is one place where government agencies consistently do a better job than private companies. I’ll have more to say about this when I write about the general issue of health care reform (soon, I promise!).
But whether because of ideology or because of H.M.O. campaign contributions, the people now running the country refuse to learn that lesson. As part of last year’s prescription drug bill, they tried again, offering an even bigger subsidy to private plans.
And that turns out to be an important reason for the deterioration in Medicare’s prospects: of the seven years lopped off the life of the trust fund, two are the result of increased subsidies mandated by last year’s law, mainly in the form of higher payments to H.M.O.’s.
So what did we learn this week? Social Security is in decent shape. Medicare has problems, but ill-conceived “reform” has only made those problems worse. And let’s rip up that awful prescription drug bill and start over.Ā Ā
E-mail: krugman@nytimes.com
National Guard and Reserve troops not receiving promised health care coverage
The Daily Times
March 24, 2004
Military health plan denied Guard, Reserve
By Mike Madden, Gannett News Service
The Pentagon still isn’t giving uninsured National Guard and Reserve troops access to the military’s health care plan, almost six months after a law mandating the coverage was signed.
Pentagon officials don’t have a set schedule for getting the program ready.
But time may be running out. The legal authority for the program, intended as a demonstration, expires at the end of this year, although some lawmakers want to make it permanent.
As part of the $87 billion bill to pay for fighting and reconstruction . In Iraq, the Pentagon was supposed to let uninsured part-time troops buy into the Tricare health insurance plan.
Some supporters of the Tricare expansion wonder if the Pentagon is deliberately moving slowly. Top defense officials opposed the plan last year, balking at its cost, and oppose extending it past this year.
“I’m terribly concerned that some in the Pentagon are just running out . The clock,” said Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle.
http://www.thedailytimes.com/sited/story/html/159447
Comment: Wouldn’t it be simpler if we all automatically received comprehensive health care coverage at birth?
Medicare Deficits: Disaster or Opportunity?
Medicare Deficits: Disaster or Opportunity?
2004 Annual Report of the Boards of Trustees of the Federal Hospital Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Funds
March 23, 2004
Total Medicare expenditures were $280.8 billion in 2003 and are expected to increase in future years at a faster pace than either workers’ earnings or the economy overall. As a percentage of GDP, expenditures are projected to increase from 2.6 percent currently to 13.8 percent by 2078 (based on our
intermediate set of assumptions). The level of Medicare expenditures is expected to exceed that for Social Security in 2024 and, by 2078, to represent almost twice the cost of Social Security. Growth of this magnitude, if realized, would place a substantially greater strain on the nation’s workers, Medicare beneficiaries, and the Federal Budget.
The long-range financial projections for HI (Part A – Hospital Insurance) continue to show a very substantial financial imbalance. Budget. By the end of the 75-year period, scheduled taxes would be sufficient to cover only one-fourth of projected expenses. Accordingly, bringing the HI program into long-range financial balance would require very substantial increases in revenues and/or reductions in benefits.
The projections shown in this report continue to demonstrate the need for timely and effective action to address Medicare’s financial challenges- both the long-range financial imbalance facing the HI trust fund and the heightened problem of rapid growth in expenditures. We believe that solutions can and just be found to ensure the financial integrity of HI in the long term and to reduce the rate of growth in Medicare costs. Consideration of such reforms should occur in the relatively near future.
The sooner the solutions are enacted, the more flexible and gradual they can be. Moreover, the early introduction of reforms increases the time Available for affected individuals and organizations-including health care providers, beneficiaries, and taxpayers-to adjust their expectations. We believe that prompt, effective, and decisive action is necessary to address these challenges.
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/publications/trusteesreport/2004/tr.pdf
Comment: Although the specifics of this 221 page report will provoke considerable debate, the conclusion that action is necessary on Medicare is certainly warranted. But there is risk that attention will be narrowly directed to benefit reductions, tax increases, and privatization proposals involving greater beneficiary contributions.
Reform of health care funding should not be limited to the Medicare program since serious systemic flaws would not be addressed. Excess utilization is clearly linked to excess capacity in the health care delivery system. Measures such as regional planning and separate budgeting of capital improvements would slow cost escalation. But it would be impossible to control capacity for Medicare alone and leave the rest of health care delivery to the marketplace. In fact, health care costs are a problem for all of us, not just for Medicare.
We are spending 15.5% of our GDP on health care this year.That would fund comprehensive services for all of us, including more comprehensive services for Medicare beneficiaries. We do need to address the Medicare imbalance, but let’s do it by adopting a program that would provide access to affordable, comprehensive care for everyone: a single payer program of national health insurance.
Does universal comprehensive insurance encourage unnecessary use?
Does universal comprehensive insurance encourage unnecessary use? Evidence from Manitoba says “no”
Many argue that “free” medical care leads to unnecessary use of health resources. Evidence suggests that user fees do discourage physician use, at least by those of low socioeconomic status. In this study, we compare health care utilization and health among socioeconomic groups to determine whether people of low socioeconomic status see physicians more than would be expected given their health status
Read the full article at http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/170/2/209?maxtoshow=&eaf
The Future of Medicare
Institute for Public Accuracy 915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045 (202) 347-0020
http://www.accuracy.org ipa@accuracy.org, Wednesday, March 24, 2004
Interviews Available:
* The Future of Medicare * Exxon Valdez Anniversary
ALAN SAGER, asager@bu.edu, http://www.healthreformprogram.org
DEBORAH SOCOLAR, dsocolar@bu.edu Sager and Socolar are directors of the Health Reform Program at Boston University’s School of Public Health. They released a report in October 2003 entitled “New Medicare Rx Benefit Means Big Profits for Drug Makers.”
Sager said today: “In 2003, actuaries predicted that the Medicare Trust Fund would be depleted in 2026 — 23 years ahead. Yesterday, the actuaries redicted depletion in 2019 — seven years sooner. The evidence from past years is clear that managed care privatization has cost Medicare money. So no one should be surprised that the Medicare actuaries have cited the new Medicare bill’s provisions as a cause of accelerated Medicare insolvency. A reckless belief that privatization and managed care will save money is no substitute for genuine cost controls. Since Medicare privatization and managed care won’t save money, more people need to ask why this Congress and administration keep boosting it. Other wealthy nations cover all of their citizens, live longer and — on average — spend only one-half as much per person as we do. They are far from perfect, but we can learn from them. For example, sadly, about 50 percent of the U.S. health dollar is wasted on unnecessary clinical services, administration, excess prices for drugs and other items, and outright theft.”
Drs. IDA HELLANDER, QUENTIN YOUNG, (312) 782-6006, pnhp@aol.com, https://pnhp.org Hellander is executive director of Physicians for a National Health Program; Young is national coordinator for the group. They are both available for interviews about the future of Medicare.
DEAN BAKER, baker@cepr.net, http://www.cepr.net/publications/medicare_choice_plus.htm
Co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Baker said today: “The 2004 Medicare trustees report, released yesterday, provides further proof that President Bush’s drug plan was a massive giveaway to the
pharmaceutical and insurance industries…. It is important that the public be made aware that the financial problems facing Medicare are due to corruption and not demographics…. If our government is too corrupt to fix the U.S. health care system, then it should at least allow seniors to buy into the superior systems in other countries.” Baker is author of the report “Medicare Choice Plus: The Answer to the Long-Term Deficit Problem,” which outlines this proposal at the above web page.
DUNE LANKARD, cell: eyak@redzone.org, http://www.redzone.org Fifteen years ago today, the Exxon Valdez spilled millions of gallons of crude oil into Prince William Sound. Lankard (currently in D.C.) is an Eyak of the Eagle Clan and fished for salmon in the Copper River flats and Prince William Sound until the spill. Named a Time magazine “Hero for the Planet” in 1998, Lankard is the founder and executive director of the Eyak Preservation Council. He said today: “Exxon Mobil has yet to make good on their promise for an additional $100 million for the Sound if it had not recovered by now. Meanwhile, the just-released Fortune 500 list found Exxon Mobil to be the second biggest company on this list — and the one with the biggest profits.”
PAMELA MILLER, pkmiller@akaction.net, http://www.akaction.net Also currently in D.C., Miller is a biologist and director of Alaska Community Action on Toxics, an organization that focuses on environmental health and justice issues.
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020 or (202) 421-6858