Bartlett on Health Care in the Financial Times

Lapsed R Bruce Bartlett says government can do it better.  Hmmm.

 

America
The folly at the heart of the US healthcare debate

America is the only developed country that does not offer some form of national health insurance to all its citizens.

Those over the age of 65 have coverage through Medicare and the poor are covered through Medicaid, both established in 1965. Those who are neither poor nor old are expected to obtain their own health insurance or get a job that provides coverage. The federal government does subsidise private insurance through the tax code by allowing its cost to be excluded or deducted from taxable income. This reduces federal revenues by some $180bn per year.

In 2009, the Obama administration put forward a plan for extending health insurance to those who did not have it through an employer, those who could not afford it and those who could not obtain coverage due to a pre-existing medical condition. A complex system of subsidies was established to make coverage affordable to everyone and a mandate was put into place requiring people to get coverage or else pay a fine.

The mandate is by far the most controversial element of the Affordable Care Act. Its rationale is that insurance companies cannot be forced to cover those with pre-existing conditions without it, or else people will simply wait until they are sick before buying health insurance. Nevertheless, many Republicans view the mandate as an unconstitutional intrusion into the economy and they have brought a case before the Supreme Court to declare the legislation null and void for that reason. Court watchers believe the case could go either way, with a final decision expected just before the election in November.

Exactly what would replace the Affordable Care Act if it is found unconstitutional is a mystery. The Obama administration appears to have no back-up plan and Republicans have steadfastly refused to offer any proposal for expanding health coverage. One problem is that before Barack Obama became president, Republicans were the primary supporters of an individual mandate, viewing it is as a more market-oriented way of expanding health coverage without a completely government-run health system. Indeed, Mitt Romney, the likely Republican presidential nominee, established a healthcare system in Massachusetts, where he was governor, that is virtually identical to the national system created by Mr Obama.

Simultaneously, Republicans are keen to cut spending for Medicare and Medicaid, because they are among the most rapidly expanding government spending programmes. A plan supported by Republicans in the House of Representatives would effectively privatise Medicare, giving the elderly a government voucher to buy insurance or health services, in lieu of the pay-for-service system that exists now. Medicaid would be devolved to the states.

What neither party has made any effort to grapple with is the extraordinarily high cost of health, public and private. According to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, the US spends more of its gross domestic product on health than any other country by a large margin. Americans spent 17.4 per cent of gross domestic product on health in 2009 – almost half of it came from government – versus 12 per cent of GDP or less in other major economies. Britain spends 9.8 per cent of GDP on health, almost all of it through the public sector. The total government outlay is almost exactly the same in the US and the UK at 8.2 per cent of GDP. This suggests that for no more than the US government spends on health now, Americans could have universal coverage and a healthcare system no worse than the British.

However, the option of a completely government-run health system was never seriously considered in the US when the Affordable Care Act was debated in 2009. Americans are too convinced that everything government does is less efficient and costs more than if the private sector does it. The fact that this is obviously wrong in the case of healthcare has never penetrated the public consciousness.

At the moment, everyone is waiting for the Supreme Court to speak before moving forward on any serious new health reform plan. Whichever way the court rules, it is likely to give some push to further action next year regardless of the election outcome. Moreover, the growing governmental cost of Medicare and Medicaid is something that has to be addressed if there is any hope of stabilising the national finances. That alone would be an impetus for action even if the Affordable Care Act had never been enacted.

The writer is a former senior economist at the White House, US Congress and Treasury. He is author of ‘The Benefit and the Burden: Tax Reform – Why We Need It and What It Will Take’

Unprecedented?!?!

President Obama is nothing if not bold. Yesterday, in an abuse of language for which there is unfortunately a great deal of precedent, the president opined on SCOTUS’s recent hearing regarding the fate of ACA.

Ultimately I am confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress

Unprecedented and extraordinary? Really? No law passed by Congress has ever been overturned by the court before?

Politics is politics, of course, and we all know the games of semantic deception that are regularly played by politicians. But, especially for a former professor of constitutional law, this is a particularly embarrassing departure from reality. Doesn’t it debase our politics even more than is already the case to have a Chief Executive who is so shameless in his disregard for the meanings of the words he uses and the reality he pretends to describe?

An ACA Reform in the Details

If we look at the cost of medical care (rather than the cost of insurance, which affects about 1/7 of the bill the patient pays) we can identify several huge problems, and we have done so here many times.

To recap: we have identified non-exigent care for the poor in ERs, fee-for-service rather than for results, end-of-life care, nursing home care, shortage of providers, malpractice (both the huge cost of bad medicine and the lesser but real cost of defensive medicine), the monopoly pricing of “new” pharmaceuticals in the USA and the closing of foreign markets to us,  and the failure to integrate and computerize record keeping, thus requiring the patient to reinvent her history from time-to-time with every provider.  Forgive me if I left out a biggie.

While ACA is primarily an insurance “reform”, it contained some provisions that were pilots aimed at some of these fundamental medical costs.  Here is a report on one aimed at moving to fee-for-results, and also reducing actual malpractices, and what it looks like.  It is a hopeful report.

 Why Health Care Will Not be the Same

Something to Talk About

Posts have been a bit down over the last week (I’ve been sick and swamped at work), so here’s a bit of a random collection of stories.

“[F]our Republican senators will unveil a plan Thursday that would transition Medicare enrollees into the same health care program offered to federal employees while gradually increasing the eligibility age and requiring wealthier seniors to pay more.” The article notes that “the measure would phase out the existing Medicare program over an unspecified period of time.”

I can’t access the link that came with the above blurb, but maybe nova can help us out.

The CBO says the ACA will costs less but cover fewer people than first expected. Since the law’s primary goal is arguably to increase coverage, that seems like a bad thing.

It looks like the IPAB is going to be repealed as democrats run from the death panel as fast as they can. One of the criticisms offered up by at least one politician was that it takes these decisions away from Congress. Ummm…wasn’t that the point?

And just so it isn’t all health care, here is an amusing review of the movie version of Atlas Shrugged Part 1. The reviewer is assigned to watch random instantly available movies on Netflix and mostly he just makes fun of the movies.

And as we start the NCAA tournament….Go Green!!

Statistical retrospective on Massachusetts health care revision just published

Health Affairs published a retrospective on Massachusetts Health care.

http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/early/2012/01/24/hlthaff.2011.0653.full

Some highlights: Coverage is broader than it was in 2006, outcomes are better, costs are still increasing.  However, what I found most encouraging yet most problematical for ACA was that the use of ERs for non-emergency treatment has been reduced, but only in the last couple of years.

If ACA is to obtain a savings for the taxpayer, IMHO its best opportunity will be to remove non-emergency treatment from the ER.  I will be the among first to suggest that could have been done, years ago, without federal intervention, and there are examples of this around the nation.  For example, the @45 neighborhood clinics in SF, funded cooperatively by major employers,  the City, UCSF, and the two large insurers in the state, have been successful at this.  Now Massachusetts has proven successful at the state level.

However, the fact that there was no relief for the ERs for 3 years in Massachusetts indicates to me the lag time to spread the knowledge of “where to go” to those who need treatment.  That lag time would seemingly be, under ACA, a dependent variable upon other functions.  Is the state, responsible for the make-up of the “essential” package, disseminating information or remaining silent?  Does the locality actually offer alternate choices? [There are huge areas of the Big Empty in TX that don’t offer any choice but a 90+ mi drive to an ER, or to an unknown alternate facility].

NoVAH, could you please address this aspect of ACA – how it is to be implemented re: moving non-emergency patient care out of the ERs?

Thanks, in advance,

Mark

She is a disturbed child

Why do doctors make so much? Why is medical care so expensive?

It is the law of supply and demand: The AMA restricts the supply of doctors. 

The best article that I came across is: old.  More recent and an established history of the practice..

But, why? Why on earth would you restrict access to health care, a necessity for all people; young, old, middle-aged, fat, thin, tall, short……..WHY?

I don’t buy that medical practioners are that much smarter than the rest of us.

So, is it to make it more simple to regulate practitioners? Or just up the salary? Or is an ego thing?

Does it disturb you? Why?