Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Thoughts on Health Care Reform and the "Public Option"

I submitted the following to the local papers. We'll see if I get published.

There has been much written pro and con on the proposal for a “public option” as part of the Obama administration’s health care reform. It will supposedly provide competition to keep the insurance companies honest. Some proponents have suggested it will be the equivalent of letting everyone sign up for Medicare, with Medicare being touted as a wonderful, efficient medical insurance program.
Not enough has been discussed about the economics of this proposal. Two questions must be answered: How high will the premium be? How high will the reimbursements to providers be?
The effective Medicare premium is hard to calculate. Medicare is supported by a payroll tax on everyone of 2.9% of income – half paid by the employer, half by the employee. Those actually on Medicare pay a small monthly premium – under $100/month. We don’t know what the effective premium is per Medicare enrollee. What we do know is that despite the tax on all workers and the additional premium, Medicare is forecast to be bankrupt within a few years without either a substantial increase in the tax and/or premiums or a reduction in benefits, or both.
On the other hand, Medicare reimbursements to providers (doctors and hospitals) are low – only about 80-85% of the provider’s cost of providing care, based upon the government’s own calculations. (Reimbursements from Medicaid are even lower.) This leaves a shortfall that must be made up by a combination of private insurance paying significantly higher reimbursements (about 130% of cost nationally, less in Hawaii, due to HMSA’s near monopsony) and, for the non-profit providers, fundraising. It is also responsible for many hospitals suffering financially. Note, also, that even at the low levels of reimbursement, the cost of Medicare has risen to about ten times what it was projected to cost when passed by Congress.
Moreover, Medicare reimbursements are not uniformly related to the cost of living. Hawaii’s rate of reimbursement is significantly lower that that of other high cost of living areas of the U.S. These low reimbursements account, in large part, for the fact that two Oahu hospitals have filed for bankruptcy in recent years, all three hospitals on the Big Island have reportedly been struggling financially, and a number of physicians have left the island in recent years to practice in areas where they can make more money.
What does this suggest for a new “public option”? It will likely be underpriced and provide low reimbursements. Low premiums will attract participants away from their existing insurance companies. Later, after it is discovered that the premiums are too low to sustain the program, the private options will be gone.
Despite the low level of reimbursements, providers will participate. With the government’s large market share, they won’t have any choice. However, the low reimbursements will exacerbate the existing financial problems of many hospitals – especially those in rural areas – and the departure of physicians from less lucrative areas. If reimbursement patterns hold, Hawaii will get the short end of the reimbursement stick again.
The only possible way a “public option” would be helpful is if it reduced costs through greater operating efficiencies, while paying out reimbursements on par with private insurers. As I know of no existing government enterprise that is more efficient than its private counterparts, I am not optimistic.

9 comments:

Whitney said...

Thanks, Pod. I don't know enough about the health care plan, so I enjoyed reading this.

Briana said...

Lots of interesting information here - thanks for sharing your thoughts. Eric and I agree - it doesn't look good. It'll be interesting to hear what is said tonight.

Anna said...

I think that you are spot on in saying that if a Public Option is run like Medicare doctors/hospitals won't be able to afford practicing medecine.
Also there are SOOO many things that could be done to reduce costs and cut system innefficiency: tort reform, get rid of corn subsidies that make crap (diabetes inducing) food cheaper than healthier food, and making primary care affordable and accessible to way more people.
I do know that countries that fought long and hard against a Public Option (Switzerland) have a very high satisfaction rate among customers. Doctors aren't as happy though.
Something has to change though. Don't know how or what, but something has to.
My personal opinion is we should have a fast food and soda sin tax, but well, that is just my opinion. We could probably pay for everyones insurance with that kind of a tax. ( Is it okay to incentivise good health practices. Cheap insurance for people who exercise and eat right and up the premiums for couch potato chronic bad eaters?)

test said...

dad, dad, dad...sounds like you need to tune in tonight for a teaching moment or two by the prez. prepare to be enlightened.

I'm also a bit concerned by some of the racism that seems peppered throughout your piece...didn't you get the memo? you can't disagree or you shall be destroyed!

at this point it is all a joke. dems going absolutely crazy, drunk with power while repubs are sitting back watching them all self destruct. the new idea of by-partisanship held by dems(abandon your ideas and principles and let us run you over)
isn't helping anything either.

hope! change!

i know this is all in no way constructive, but as i said, how can we not all be looking at this stuff as a big joke?

Lisa said...

I agree with you... hope it gets published!

I agree with Anna- they should tax fast food and all the crap people eat. Government should be handing out free gym memberships, that might help! and tax you if you don't show up. There can never be enough taxing, right?

Whitney said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Danielle Hastings said...

Bill, I just saw your post. Thank you for articulating facts, which no one seems to be talking about. I've realized hope and change thrive best in ambiguity, which is why Obama was long on rhetoric (about 50 minutes) last night and very short on details. Loved his skating around tort reform. Are we going to cap malpractice lawsuits at $250K or not? It's extremely simple. Open up state borders with insurance. Go back and read the constitution about restrictions on power in the executive branch. Stop hiring communists to work in the White House, stop funding corrupt ACORN with our tax money, stop your propaganda machine through the NEA and every other front organization for your globalist agenda. I am about ready to board a red-eye flight tomorrow night to DC to march on Saturday, I'm that sick of this creep into a nanny state! Maybe spending a week in Moscow a month ago has something to do with my outrage. Sorry, I want America to stay America.

Bill Hastings said...

West Hawaii Today published my piece today. It will be interesting to see what comments, if any, I get.

Liz said...

Congrats on getting your article in print. You always have wise, well-thought out ideas. I should be more educated on the issues--but it just isn't at the top of my priority list. Thanks for your insights.