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Among the issues of the 1992 Presidential election was
the need for reform of health care's financial structure in the
United States. Although an
issue on the continuing agenda of government, health system reform was
catapulted to among the top priorities with the surprising victory of Senator
Harrison Wofford in Pennsylvania over former Pennsylvania governor and U.S.
Attorney General Richard Thornburgh. With health care the primary campaign
issue, politicians and news media made this their focus for the next several
months and ultimately a key issue of the 1992 Presidential election. Upon
assuming office, President Clinton appointed a task force, chaired by his wife,
to recommend a major alteration in the financing of health care. Although the
basic reform direction was developed during the campaign and Presidential
transitional period, the Task Force was called upon to develop many details and
to present options to the President. The Task Force labored for months with some
controversy over representation and secrecy. After several months of delay from
the original target date, President Clinton formally revealed his plan in an
address to the Congress on September 22, 1993.
GOALS
Problems that exist in financing of health care are
well recognized. These problems clearly are not new, only their magnitude
increased their visibility. At the turn of the century, there was extensive
debate over financing of health care. The American Association for Labor
Legislation led the unsuccessful fight to follow the emerging European example
of a national health care system (Starr, 1982:244). Similarly the Committee on
the Costs of Medical Care's report in 1932 urged reform, but President Roosevelt
believed that it was too controversial to have it included in his Social
Security bill (Stan, 1982:270). Truman's advocacy of a major overall of medical
financing did not see fruition until the enactment of Medicare for the elderly
and Medicaid for the poor (which often includes many elderly, especially for
nursing home care) in 1965.
Health care costs continue to escalate, exceeding
inflation each year. It has taken an increasingly percent of our Gross Domestic
Product, currently around 14 percent, more than any other nation, and projected
to continue to increase. Both Federal and state government feel the cost
escalation, not only because of the cost of their own employees health benefits,
but because 40 percent of all personal health care are currently paid by
government. States find that their share of Medicaid costs are among the three
most expensive state programs.
In the
U.S. private health insurance
became part of the fringe benefit of employers. Wage freezes during WWII led
employers to increase compensation for employees by adding health insurance. At
first a small addition to wage costs, but now health insurance has become a
significant employment cost factor. Consequently, many smaller businesses do not
provide health insurance for their employees, and many of those firms that do
are asking employees to pay more in deductibles and co‑payments. Some insure the
employee, but not the family. Some employers must pay significantly more in
health insurance because they have older or sicker workers. Costs to these
employers escalate as more insurance firms use experience rather than community
rating for determining premium payments.
The census bureau reports that 38.9 million people in
the U.S.
do not have health insurance or are covered by Medicaid on any given day during
1992 with 25 million being without health insurance during the entire year. An
even larger number of Americans have inadequate coverage. Many poor with
government provided Medicaid still have difficulty seeing a doctor because many
physicians will not accept Medicaid patients in those states with low
reimbursement levels. A still larger number of Americans who have coverage,
about 85 percent, fear that they will lose this coverage if they become
unemployed (a realistic situation with the many layoffs as firms downsize to
become more competitive) or change jobs.
Changing the financing of health must be achieved in
the context of an overall high quality, high technology medical system in the
U.S. Surveys repeatedly show that although many Americans are concerned about
paying for health care, the overwhelming majority are satisfied with their
physicians and the health care they are now receiving. Further, it is
continually noted by health care providers and their interest groups, that the
U.S. has more technology
available, thus practically eliminating waiting times, than other advanced
nations. We therefore are expected to change the wheels of the apple cart
without disturbing a single macintosh. The goals of the Clinton Task Force were
to recommend changes that would maintain this quality, improve access, provide
security against loss of insurance, and contain costs.
CLINTON ADMINISTRATION'S PROPOSAL IN BRIEF
The Administration's proposal guarantees everyone health coverage by
requiring business firms to provide heath insurance for their workers, including
part-time employees (prorated for those working 10‑30 hours a week), with the
government subsidizing small employers with low wage employees. Employees may be
required to co‑pay up to 20 percent of the cost of health insurance, again with
a federal subsidy for low income workers, currently defined as those making less
that 150 percent of the poverty level. To gain this coverage, states will form
regional Alliances to negotiate the best rates. Medicaid will continue for the
poor with government paying 95 percent of employer and employee
portions to the relevant
Alliance.
Providers would not know if they were seeing a Medicaid patient or an employed
payer, thus correcting the problem of discrimination against medical assistance
patients that now widely occurs. Medicare would not be changed except that those
with incomes greater than $100,000 for individuals and $125,000 for couples
would be charged a higher Part B premium, currently three‑quarter subsidized by
the Federal treasury. States will have the option of including Medicare within
their regional Advances.
The President's proposal includes a standard benefit
package, somewhat more extensive than in many proposals. For example,
prescription drugs would be included for both Medicare and non‑Medicare patients
after a $250 deductible is met. Patients would pay 20 percent of the cost up to
a maximum $1,000 a year. Mental health benefits, vision care for children, and
some expansion of long term care coverage are included. In 1973 it was a similar
extensive benefit package required for HMOs to be eligible for federal support
under Nixon that initially doomed the program. Only after a scaling down of the
required benefits and a few other concessions did the federal effort at
expansion of HMOs succeed. The plan does counter the problems of portability and
preexisting conditions. Workers will be able to get insurance at their new job
(portability), thus eliminating the problem known as "job lock". Workers will
also be totally covered with an end to the insurance practice of excluding
preexisting conditions. Further, the plan will require premium charges to be
based upon a community rating, thus eliminating the increased use of experience
rating which has driven up costs for small businesses and other firms employing
workers that have had costly medical conditions or are older. Again, the cost
question arises as the risk to insurers increases. No longer will insurers be
able to try to insure only the least risky workers, a practice known as "cherry
picking" (adverse risk selection).
Several other changes are included in this
comprehensive medical system overall. For example, auto and workers'
compensation injuries would be handled through the
Alliance. Insurance companies
would be subject to antitrust which they currently are not. Doctors would be
allowed to form networks with hospitals, clinics, and other health providers
free from antitrust action. Other areas include malpractice reform with
alternative dispute resolution made mandatory. Settlements may be paid over time
rather than in a single payment. Even lawyers' fees would be limited to
one‑third of award in malpractice cases. Medical schools would be directed to
graduate 50 percent of their class in family medicine after a phase in period.
Drug companies would be required to give Medicare recipients the same 15 percent
drug discount that they give states for Medicaid recipients. In my view, it is
not the managed competition that makes this proposal the most significant
domestic public policy proposal in U.S. history, but the scope of other health
system changes included in the proposal.
ISSUES OF THE PROPOSAL
Given the complexity of the Administration's proposal,
many issues and uncertainties arise. A few of the more visible and contentious
ones are as follows:
1. Will the Proposal
Cost Jobs?
Despite conflicting estimates over job loses engendered by
the proposal's implementation, the problem is that net job change will be small.
Undoubtedly some small businesses, who do not now provide health insurance, will
close because of added cost. But low wage firms will receive a subsidy with
others being able to shift cost to workers with lower wages or reductions in
other fringe benefits. Many will increase prices to pay the added costs. Small
firms who currently offer insurance will be benefiting as their insurance costs
should decline with the reduction of cost shifting and the use of larger labor
pools based upon community rating to determine instance rates. Further, the
proposal envisions the controlling of rate increases. Double digit increases now
negatively impacts these firms. For small low wage businesses, the cost will be
limited to 3.5 percent of payroll, estimated to be equivalent to a 15 cent to 35
cent increase in the minimum wage (Wartzman and Saddler, 1994: A15).
Projections are that demand for labor in manufacturing
and other sectors where health cost should fail will increase. This along with
some expansion of jobs in the health sector as more of the uninsured receive
coverage should result in the minimization of any job loses and may result in
net job gains (Holahan, 1993: 3).
2. Administrative Cost of Health Alliances
Since these institutions do not
exist, their creation will result in added administrative costs. In contrast a
single payer system would be less expensive as shown by the low administrative
cost of Canada's health system and the low administrative cost of our own
Medicare and Medicaid system, currently 3.3 percent (Anderson: 1992). Private
insurance has an administrative cost of 11.9 percent of premium (Woolhandler and
Himmelstein, 1991). The question is whether the added administrative cost of the
Alliance
is worth it for the functions performed. The Alliances will negotiate in a
competitive market, will provide information to consumers including quality
information, and will certify those eligible for government insurance subsidies.
Some of the Alliance's cost will be offset by lower private administrative costs
of insurers and physicians.
3. Choice in the
Health Plan
The Health Insurance Association of America (HIAA),
representing small insurers, has run commercials arguing that
the Administration's plan significantly limits choice of physicians by patients.
Mrs. Clinton, supported by the
Alliance
for Managed Competition, representing larger insurers, contends that the
ads by HIAA are false.
In fact
Clinton's plan does provide
choice and greater choice for some than currently available. For example, an
individual will be able to select a managed care (e.g. PPO or HMO) or a
fee‑for‑service plan. If your primary care physician is a member of a particular
plan, you can select that plan. If not, you can select the fee‑for‑service
option. The main factor controlling your choice could be cost. Your personal
physician may be part of only the most expensive plan. The Plan's concern with
choice is revealed by the requirement that at least one fee‑for‑service option
be made available and that HMOs should have a point‑of‑service option, allowing
individuals to see a physician not in the HMOs panel if the patient is willing
to pay an additional amount. In 1992 nearly 90 million Americans received their
health care from a PPO or HMO managed care plan, up from 25 million in 1985
(Wall Street Journal, Dec. 30, 1993: 1). Choice today is being limited by
insurers who are removing higher cost physicians from their networks.
Patients and physicians feel increasingly frustrated
with the current system of managed care plans, where care provided includes
attempts to contain utilization (Inglehart, 1992: 963). In the abstract this is
a sensible system. But in individual cases, it often produces frustration as
patient and physician perceive the system as providing inadequate care with
non‑physicians or physicians who have not seen the patient determining
hospitalizations, tests, and procedures that a patient may have.
With limitations of insurance premiums resulting from
competition and a restriction on yearly increases, it is difficult to imagine
the system not increasing the use of utilization controls‑the very meaning of
"managed" competition. Thus choice of physician, especially primary care
physician, will be wide. But total freedom of doctor and patient to determine
care will be limited as is increasingly the case now.
4. Global
Budgets
Similar to arguments on choice, opponents maintain that the Administration's
plan has a health budget that will greatly limit the amount of health care
provided. Global budgets have been used effectively to control the rise of
health care costs in other nations, but if too restrictive will result in
inadequate availability of services to meet the demand. In
Canada it is the global budget
for hospital expenditures that limit the availability of technology, not the
single payer method of compensating physicians.
A Global Budget as implemented in other nations is not
proposed. What the opponents are referring to are premium caps that will be
determined by a National Health Board. The limitation of services would result
from utilization controls imposed to insure financial viability of the plans
under premium restrictions. Further, Alliances are permitted to develop
fee‑for‑service plans that would reduce payments to providers if the volume of
services exceed utilization targets. This latter approach intends to avoid
substantial premium differences between HMOs and fee‑for‑service plans (Holahan,
1993: 3).
5. Is the
Financing Adequate?
A major conflict is the
ultimate cost to government. The plan includes a number of government expenses
beyond the Alliances noted above‑drug benefits for those on Medicare, subsidies
to poor and to small business, government financing of health benefits for early
retirees‑to cite a few.
The major financing of the plan includes an increase
in the cigarette tax, a one percent payment by large firms who choose not to
join an Alliance, and savings on Medicare and Medicaid (Robin, 1993).
Unfortunately uncertainties make financing difficult to forecast. For example,
if the increase in the cigarette tax, a regressive levy, results in fewer people
smoking, then we will not have nearly as much revenue. Savings in Medicare and
Medicaid depend on the ability of the new health plan to reduce the escalation
in health costs. The Administration's cost estimate is based upon having the
growth rate of health spending being below that of overall economic growth from
1996‑1999 as inefficiencies and fraud are routed out of the system. Such
assumption is dubious. No doubt a tax increase or a slower implementation of
benefits will be needed. Thus the proposal's cost is the most uncertain aspect
of the plan.
Today the financing of services for the poor are
hidden. Service providers who render uncompensated care to those who can't pay
and do not have insurance shift the cost to others. Thus businesses that
currently provide health insurance for their employees are now paying for the
health cost of the poor. If the cost is removed from the premium and paid by a
tax, it will make visible what is now a hidden payment.
OUTLOOK
Clinton's proposal if enacted
would be the most comprehensive domestic policy change in U.S. history. This is
less true if one focuses just on the managed competition aspect for the health
care system is currently moving in that direction. The proposal includes reforms
from malpractice to physician education to workers compensation. In a nation
whose approach to problems is essentially incremental, such a comprehensive
approach will tap significant opposition. In the U.S. even Medicare had been
opposed for decades with its implementation in 1965 through the private
insurance system.
Powerful interest groups, including the American
Medical Association (the top national PAC), the Health Insurance Association of
America, and a variety of business groups, will doom the proposal. They will
argue that the system is not broken and needs only small repairs to correct the
deficiencies. They will frighten those who now have health insurance, which
represent the majority, with the argument that they will lose benefits and gain
additional costs. And they will argue that the program empowers big government,
unable to administer programs efficiently or effectively.
In an election year with public opinion concerned with
health financing, something probably will be enacted. The maximum may be an
Alliance structure in a
managed competitive system. But businesses below a certain size probably will
not be required to provide health instance. In lieu of providing health
insurance, they may be required to pay a tax to the government to provide
benefits for their employees. A national board with power to determine maximum
premium increases will be jettisoned in favor of recommended guidelines. A
completely community rating system will not be implemented.
As for the practice of medicine, institutional change
will continue as the solo practitioner fades in favor of group practice,
including more capitated payment methods, but with an enhanced flexibility for
individuals to go outside the group if they are willing to pay additional costs.
Larger institutions was prevail as physicians combine and larger insurers
dominate through managed care plans. The concern about the escalating cost of
medicine will not abate as new technology and the aging baby boom generation
drive costs higher.
WORKS CITED
Anderson, Gerald F. 1992
"All‑payer Ratesetting: Down but Not Out." Health Care Financing Review.
1991 Annual Supplement. Pp. 35‑41.
Holahan, John. 1993. "Clinton's
Health Care Plan: Assessing the Criticism." Policy Bites. Washington: The
Urban Institute. November.
Iglehard, John K 1992. "The
American Health Care System." The
New England
Journal of Medicine.
326:962‑967. April 2.
Rubin, Alissa. 1993. "Clinton's
Health Plan Envisions Reorganized Marketplace." Congressional Quarterly
Weekly Report. Pp. 2458‑2463. September 18.
Starr, Paul. 1982. The Social Transformation of
American Medicine. New York: Basic Books. Wall Street Journal. 1993. December
30.
Wartzman, Rick and Jeanne
Saddler. 1994. "A Fervetn Lobbyist Rallies Small Business to Battle Health
Plan." Wall Street Journal. January 5. p.Al.
Woolhandler, Steffie and David
Himmelstein.1991. "The Deteriorating Administrative Efficiency of the U.S.
Health Care System".
New England
Journal of Medicine.
324: 1253‑1258. May 2. |