Wednesday, November 10, 2010

qotd: Deficit commission: Co-Chairs' proposal

National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform
November 10, 2010
Co-Chairs' Proposal (Draft Document)

Reducing Health Care Costs (page 31)

## Medium Term: Fully offset the cost of the "Doc Fix" by asking doctors and other health providers, lawyers, and individuals to take responsibility for slowing health care cost growth. Offsets include:
  * Pay doctors and other providers less, improve efficiency, and reward quality by speeding up payment reforms and increasing drug rebates
  * Pay lawyers less and reduce the cost of defensive medicine by adopting comprehensive tort reform 
  * Expand cost-sharing in Medicare to promote informed consumer health  choices and spending
  * Expand successful cost containment demonstrations
  * Strengthen IPAB
  * Recommend additional health savings (illustrative examples to follow)
## Long Term: Contain growth in total federal health spending to GDP+1% after 2020 by establishing a process to regularly evaluate cost growth, and take additional steps as needed if projected savings do not materialize

Paying for the "Doc Fix" (page 32)

## Pay doctors, other health providers, and drug companies less and improve efficiency and quality
  * Replace cuts required by SGR through 2015 with modest reductions while directing CMS to establish a new payment system, beginning in 2015, to reduce costs and improve quality.
  * Require rebates for brand-name drugs as a condition of participating in Medicare Part D.
## Increase cost-sharing in Medicare
  * Eliminate first-dollar coverage in Medigap plans.
  * Replace existing cost-sharing rules with universal deductible, single coinsurance rate, and catastrophic cap for Medicare Part A and Part B.
## Pay lawyers less and reduce the cost of defensive medicine
  * Enact comprehensive medical malpractice liability reform to cap non-economic and punitive damages and make other changes in tort law.

Savings Beyond the Doc Fix (page 34)

## Expand Successful Cost-Containment Demonstration Projects by 2015
## Identify an additional $200 billion savings in federal health spending
## Strengthen the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB)
  * Include all providers (no carve-outs) and recommendations on benefit design and cost-sharing.
  * Improve savings targets to 1.5% starting in 2015.
  * Eliminate the trigger that could turn off IPAB in 2019.
  * Allow cost-savings recommendations even when spending does not exceed the target growth rate.
  * Allow proposals that apply reforms to health plans in the exchange.
  * Require affirmative Congressional approval of recommendations or alternative savings, with a "back-up sequester" increasing premiums and reducing provider payments if IPAB recommendations (or equivalent savings) are not adopted.

Long-Term Health Care Savings (page 36)

## Set global target for total federal health expenditures after 2020 (Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, exchange subsidies, employer health exclusion), and review costs every 2 years. Keep growth to GDP+1%.
## If costs have grown faster than targets (on average of previous 5 years), require President to submit and Congress to consider reforms to lower spending, such as:
  * Increase premiums (or further increase cost-sharing)
  * Overhaul the fee-for-service system
  * Develop a premium support system for Medicare
  * Add a robust public option and/or all-payer system in the exchange
  * Further expand authority of IPAB



Comment:  Today, behind closed doors, the chairmen of President's Obama's deficit commission, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, presented to the other members of the commission their draft proposal for reform. The selections above, from their report, apply to health care.

The reception by the committee members is expressed well by Lori Montgomery of The Washington Post:

"Commission members, who include a dozen sitting members of Congress, emerged from the morning session in a Capitol Hill hearing room praising the seriousness of the effort but voicing deep reservations about the details."


Obviously, some of these proposals are very deleterious. It is not as if the commission didn't receive suggestions for far better policies to address costs while actually improving our health care system, though they have chosen to ignore them. Following is a quote from the testimony of Margaret Flowers, M.D. of Physicians for a National Health Program:

"The alternative scenario of a national improved Medicare for All will save lives and save money. National improved Medicare for All will place our nation on the path of becoming one of the best health systems in the world – something of which we can all be proud. This commission has the ability to recommend creating a financially sustainable universal health system. I urge the members of this commission to recommend addressing the deficit through adopting this most popular approach: national improved Medicare for All. Don't cut Medicare. Protect it, improve it and expand it to cover everyone."


Video version (in 6 of 7 at 27:30):

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

qotd: Children worse off under Utah's privatized CHIP program

The Salt Lake Tribune
November 8, 2010
Central Utah children on CHIP face doctor shortage
By Kirsten Stewar

Privatizing Utah's Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) is supposed to save money and improve services.

But with no proof yet of any savings reaped, the experiment has been tripped up by service breakdowns.

The latest: Complaints from some of the 379 CHIP families in Carbon and Emery counties who say their children no longer have access to pediatric care. That's because Intermountain Healthcare's SelectHealth, which inherited some CHIP patients on July 1, has no primary care doctors in that region.

"Now, after 10 years with our local family doctor, we need to find a new one," said Jason Chambers of Wellington.

Chambers said his doctor applied to become a SelectHealth provider months ago and gave up after receiving no response.

Chambers phoned the toll-free number on his CHIP card and was told his only option was to drive over the mountain to an in-network doctor in Spanish Fork. "That's 65 miles away — four hours round trip," to keep an appointment, said Chambers.

Legislation to privatize the CHIP program was backed by the insurance industry and sponsored in 2008 by Taylorsville Republican and insurance broker Rep. Jim Dunnigan... He said he sponsored his bill not as a favor to the insurance industry but to save taxpayer dollars and improve care through market forces.



Comment:  The drive to divert the administration of publicly-financed health insurance programs to the private sector can be described at best as irrational fanaticism. The claim that private administration of public insurance programs uses market forces to improve quality and reduce costs has been disproven repeatedly. Costs of private administration are always higher, so any reductions in net spending are the result of curtailment of services.

Utah's Children's Health Insurance Program is one of the latest victims of this fanaticism. Requiring a four hour round trip to a primary care physician might save money by decreasing utilization, but it certainly fails on the quality measure of access.

If Utah had a publicly-administered universal health program, this wouldn't even be an issue. Mr. Chambers' children could continue to go to their own family physician.

Imagine with such a system in place - say a single payer national health program - if someone said that we are turning the program over to a private entity that requires you to travel to a distant community for your routine care, what would be your response? After the expletives, then what would you say?

The irrational fanatics are swarming. How long are we going to tolerate being stung?

Monday, November 8, 2010

qotd: President Obama confirms strategy to introduce a Republican reform model

60 Minutes
November 4, 2010
President Barack Obama

President Barack Obama:  ... I think there were some that argued, "Well, you should just stop and let people digest all these changes. And so, you shouldn't take on something as big as health care." And I'll be honest with you, Steve, at the time, we knew that it probably wasn't great politics. 

Steve Kroft:  You were told that by your aides.

President Obama:  Absolutely... So, ultimately, I had to make a decision: do I put all that aside, because it's gonna be bad politics? Or do I go ahead and try to do it because it will ultimately benefit the country? I made the decision to go ahead and do it. And it proved as costly politically as we expected. Probably actually a little more costly than we expected, politically. 

Kroft:  In what ways?

President Obama:  Well, partly because I couldn't get the kind of cooperation from Republicans that I had hoped for. We thought that if we shaped a bill that wasn't that different from bills that had previously been introduced by Republicans -- including a Republican governor in Massachusetts who's now running for President -- that, you know, we would be able to find some common ground there. And we just couldn't. 



Comment:  President Obama now confirms what was obvious all along. A political decision was made to introduce the Republican model of health care reform, with the presumption that the Republicans would cooperate. The tragedy is not that it proved to be so costly politically, but rather that we are locked into a very expensive and quite ineffective model - the version that has now been abandoned by the Republicans.

Those "secret negotiations behind closed doors" were not so secret. Senators Grassley and Enzi were cooperating in their respective committees to try to build reform on what was really the Republican model, drafted by a recruited WellPoint executive. During negotiations the basic model was not modified, and the disputed differences in policy were negligible. Only after it became evident that the health care reform effort could be used to discredit the Democrats did Grassley and Enzi yield to the Republican leadership by agreeing to become opponents of the effort. This has been a tremendous lesson in the pitfalls of placing politics before policy.

Yes, the Democrats did pass a bill, but can you call that a success? The bill will not control spending, it will not insure everyone, and it will establish under-insurance as the norm, exposing individuals and families with health care needs to financial hardship.

Simply stated, this was yet another political failure in our nearly century-long quest for health care for all.

No effective bill can possibly be passed in the next two years because of the current political climate, but that does not mean that we should wait it out until the politics are right. Quite the contrary.

Many in the nation still do not understand that an improved Medicare that would cover everyone is a vastly superior option. It is imperative that we greatly intensify our efforts to be sure that they do understand. If we wait until we like the partisan ratios in the House and Senate, it will be far too late for us to have any real impact.

Get to work.