Articles Tagged ‘Medicaid’

Robert Reich: What An Honest President Would Say About Health Reform

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

A little over two years ago, Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary under President Bill Clinton and currently an economic advisor to President Obama, spoke at the University of California, Berkeley. The content of what he said that evening has just now come to light. This is relevant not only because the content of his speech, or at least a portion of it, concerned health care reform, but that he let slip what the White House and the Congressional Democratic leadership truly have in store when it comes to this vital issue – none of it good.

Speaking at a Colloquium on Political Science at the California collegial institution on September 26th, 2007, Robert Reich spent time on a number of prominent topics, including, if you care to listen to the entire audio of the speech he gave that evening, global warming. But what concerns us most at the present time is what he had to say in regards to how healthcare reform should be presented by a candidate – presumably a progressive one – for president if, according to him, we as Americans truly lived in an educated, honorable, realistic democracy. Thank goodness we live in a constitutional republic, huh?

Reich spelled out for those in attendance what an honest president – so, in other words, neither his former boss nor his current one – should say to the American people about health care reform. Every single point he makes in the video above is in essence word-for-word the arguments conservatives have made for months in the course of this health care debate against the plans proposed by Congressional Democrats, including Senator Max Baucus’s joke of a bill, America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009.

Such gems include:

  • Young, healthy people having to pay more for health care
  • Keeping the latest medical technology and pharmaceutical drugs out of the hands of seniors because extending their lives a few more years is “too expensive”
  • And because seniors are ‘too expensive’ to maintain, the government is ‘just going to let them die’.
  • The government, using the leverage of Medicare and Medicaid programs, would force pharmaceutical companies to keep the costs of prescription drugs low. This, in turn, would mean ‘less innovation’ and ‘less new products’.
  • All this adds up to the conclusion that you will not likely live longer then your parents.

And, no, ladies and gentlemen, he isn’t joking.

It is very difficult to decide what is more astonishing – that someone like Robert Reich would go in front of an audience and openly say something like this or that the crowd actually applauds the fact that they will ‘not live longer’ then their parents. More then likely the room was packed full of white privileged elitists who are rich enough not to have to be subjected to the same medical care as the lowly mortals below them.

Ten Key Questions Framing the Health Care Debate

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

The “Front Porch Republic” blog published an in-depth analysis of the health care issue and the many questions the average American will consider when developing an opinion on the proposals of the White House and Congress:

Operation how to downsize medicare

“The burqa is not welcome in French territory,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said in a June 22nd speech at Versailles.  He was referring to the head-to-toe garment worn by some Muslim women which covers their faces.  It is banned in French schools.

What does that have to do with health care reform?  Well, maybe a lot.

Can you imagine any form of dress being banned in America?  Think of President Obama in the Rose Garden announcing that “sagging pants are not welcome in America.”

If you tell an 87 year old Frenchman that he’s going to have to live with a 98% blockage of his left anterior descending coronary artery, he’s going to shrug and say “C’est la vie.”

Say that to an American, and he’ll say “The hell I am.”  And if he’s had a stroke, and can’t talk, his solicitous California relative, who hasn’t visited Pops in a decade, will say “The hell he will.”

And yet if we don’t change the medical entitlements of aging Americans, we’re almost certainly going to bankrupt Medicare within a decade–long before we bankrupt Social Security.

This is not just my opinion.  It is the stated opinion of Mr. Obama, the Congressional Budget Office, Rush Limbaugh, John McCain, Nancy Pelosi, The New Yorker, the New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal.

Here are the ten most important question to ask about health care in America:

1. Is American health care among the best or the worst of the First World?

It’s the best in the world if you have decent insurance, and among the best if you don’t.  Nobody is denied care in America.  Show up in the emergency room uninsured or undocumented, having just wrapped yourself around a light pole while operating a motorcycle drunk and exercising your constitutional right not to wear a helmet, and you’re in line for a million bucks of state-of-the-art free care paid for by the shrinking number of citizens still paying taxes.  Nobody denies that.  What they point to is a mediocre life expectancy, and a relatively high infant mortality.  The first is due to slovenly lifestyles (36% of our Medicare costs, and 48% of Medicaid, are directed to the treatment and complications of obesity), and the second to a decadent underclass which refuses to act responsibly in the face of pregnancy.  By the way, don’t forget that the vast majority of technological and pharmaceutical innovations in the world are provided and paid for by Americans.  See Nobel, Alfred, Prize thereof.  Don’t forget, either, that there are few queues in this country, except for organ transplants.

2. Why do most Americans say they want health care reform?

Because we are a truly empathetic people, and we feel sorry for responsible people with hard-earned assets who lose their insurance with their job and can’t afford to replace it.  Or even for people who are healthy, choose to not purchase coverage, get sick, and are denied coverage.  We can put ourselves in their shoes, and it worries us.

3. Why do most Americans fear health care reform?

Because despite all the weeping and wailing in the media, we’re pretty happy with our own coverage.  It’s like with politics: people hate Congress, but love their congressperson.  We know and trust our personal physician, we worship with the nurses from the local hospital, we play softball with insurance company employees who are decent people.  It could be worse, and we’re afraid it will be.  So we can be spooked easily by demagogues on both ends of the philosophical and political spectrum.

4. Is a crisis coming?

Almost certainly.  Theodore Dalrymple observes that financial collapse has been threatened since Medicare was first introduced, and it hasn’t happened yet.  Nevertheless, the graph plotting percentage of GDP consumed by health care rises inexorably, excepting the mid-1990s (more about that later).  Health care inflation far exceeds salary inflation, and with the Baby Boomers just entering Medicare it is hard to avoid the conclusion that we are facing a demographic apocalypse.  If it doesn’t bankrupt the country, it certainly will sap our competitiveness vis-à-vis the lean and hungry barbarians in the East.

5. So– how do we reduce costs?

There‘s the rub.  Let’s break it down.  Who has the authority to reduce costs, how do they do it, and how do we like it when they do?  There are four options: government, doctors, insurance companies, and patients (that is, us).

5a.  How does the government reduce costs?

Who knows?  They’ve never done it.  Medicare is under complete control of the government, and Medicare inflation has been galloping right toward the edge of a cliff.  Furthermore, virtually all private insurance now hitches the stagecoach of physician reimbursement to Medicare-determined Relative Value Units.  Those passengers are headed toward the same cliff.  Furthermore, those RVU decisions have so inflated the salaries of procedural specialists relative to generalists over the past 15 years that medical students won’t choose primary care, which means there aren’t enough internists and family physicians to care for those 47 million uninsured Americans.  Furthermore, every year at the stroke of midnight Congress caves under pressure and authorizes additional Medicare expenditures.  Furthermore, Medicare is already cost-shifting a large percentage of its real expenditures onto private insurers and citizens, who make up for the share of hospital operating costs which Medicare won’t pay.  Oh–and those taxpaying citizens, from janitors to rocket scientists, pay 2.9% of every dollar they earn to support Medicare.  That’s the government record to date.  What do you think?  Want more of the same?  Do you believe in miracles?

5b. How do private insurers reduce costs?

Who knows?  They’ve never done it.  When they try to squeeze physician reimbursement, the best physicians won’t sign contracts; they can afford to be selective, because they‘ve got more patients than they need already.  So cut-rate insurers end up with the dregs of the medical profession, and that doesn’t turn out to be a sustainable business model.  They can attempt to fix prices with other insurers, but that risks antitrust prosecution.  They can sell policies which honestly exclude certain expensive conditions or treatments, and patients will scream to the politically appointed or elected insurance commissioner when those conditions hit; that results in embarrassing publicity.  They can “reinterpret” contract provisions to the detriment of patients, expand pre-existing conditions, drop coverage when the disease gets expensive, refuse to cover “experimental” treatments, or cherry-pick healthy patients–more public black eyes.

5c. How do physicians reduce costs?

At least this is not a theoretical question.  Those disappearing primary care physicians brought health care inflation to a halt in the 1990s.  It was called “managed care,” and the physicians were called “gatekeepers.”  They were guarding the gate to the Money Tree through mandatory referrals for procedures, consultations, hospitalizations, and lab tests, and had incentives to do a good job.  The strongest incentive was called “full capitation.”  The insurer gave the gatekeeper all the premium money, less administrative fees; withheld a percentage from the gatekeeper’s reimbursement; and if the gatekeeper didn’t spend it all he got his “withhold” back at the end of the year, plus a cut of the leftovers.  Pretty soon lawyers figured this out, and began making this arrangement known to malpractice juries.  That stopped that.  Then the insurers tried a weaker, more subtle incentive: bonus payments based on total managed expenditures, with the payments partially disguised by percentile groupings and “quality” measures to confuse the juries.  Ultimately, though, when patients realized that the interests of their physician diverged from the interests of themselves, this arrangement was doomed.  Massachusetts, faced with bankruptcy due to its heroic experiment insuring all citizens, is flirting with the resurrection of full capitation.  This time they think it will work, because electronic medical records will enable high-school graduates working for the state to monitor the daily medical decisions of physicians.  It’s like, you know, the triumph of hope over experience.

5d. How do patients reduce costs?

This hasn’t been tried for a long, long time–since payment for medical services switched to Other Peoples’ Money in the 1940s–so we have no recent data to help us.  Proponents of Health Savings Accounts believe that if every American were given money to manage, they would make medical purchasing decisions as shrewdly as they make automobile purchasing decisions.  Opponents of HSAs point to the complexity of those decisions, the lack of pricing information, and the impossibility of deliberate choice at the point of sale in an emergency.  Proponents respond that insurance policies could be simplified and standardized, sold across state lines to increase price competition, and that the vast majority of medical decisions, anyway, are made under non-emergency conditions.  And those glowing reports of great primary care in every other industrialized nation?  Well, you could buy all of my services as a family physician– including obstetrics, office lab and x-rays, laceration repair and skin biopsies, physicals, treadmills, and 24/7 on-call coverage–for a family of six for $100 per month.   I’d make more money than I do now, because my billing cost would drop to zero.  (With the Democrats controlling the government, this option is not on the table; and we don’t have enough primary care physicians, anyway, having converted them into colonoscopists.)

6. What about rationing?

Yes, the issue is rationing– and it’s about time we started this national discussion.  It has started badly, with the New York Times trotting out Dr. Peter Singer to examine the topic from the view of a secular utililitarian.  He really did an excellent job of presenting the choices; alas, his comments elsewhere regarding the advisability of terminating human defectives age two or less, and pulling the plug on Granny, instantly set conservatives on the scent at full bay.  Mr. Obama, having risked a personal example in the form of his centenarian grandmother (who received a hip replacement while dying of cancer) was immediately equated with the Butcher of Baghdad, if not Nero reincarnate.  It is in fact possible (see 4 above) that at some point we may, as a society, be forced to make our present sub rosasystem of rationing explicit.  This might be in the form of Wise Latina Women making decisions about how much we can afford to pay for Quality Adjusted Life Years, as in Great Britain, or some other system applying medical evidence to the budget.  Whatever we do, it is not going to involve wise people like Mengele or Eichmann.  That is a statement of faith on my part, but I’d bet my income on it.  Most people are unaware that these sorts of judgments have been applied for a long time.  I remember when mammography was developing in the 1970s, the question among physicians was how much it would cost to save a life through early detection.  The answer was, “little enough that we can afford it,” and the point is that we were not Nazis in the 1970s, and we are not Nazis now.  But we do live in a world of finite resources, and at some point choices have to be made between what is possible and what is the best use of available dollars until the Money Tree is rediscovered.  This conversation should be rational, as opposed to emotional.  Can we afford quadruple bypass surgery on 89 year old citizens?  Can we afford chemotherapy which, on average, offers two months of extended life for $80,000?  It’s a hard conversation, but necessary.

7. Didn’t the Democrats try to slip euthanasia counseling into the mix in the dark of night?

I really hate to defend Democrats.  I really do.  It causes me heartburn.  But they were carrying water for my colleagues, who weren’t getting paid to spend time talking with old folks about their choices at the end of life.  So they tried to make sure they didn’t do it gratis. Politically, in hindsight, it was stupid.  However, a number of my decisions, in hindsight, have also looked stupid, though they seemed like a good idea at the time.  So I’m inclined to give them a pass.  Could we have an adult conversation about this, too?  As a Christian, I am dead-set opposed to abortion, infanticide, and euthanasia.  For me, and St. Paul, “to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”  I want to fight the good fight, to finish the race.  I’m so radical on this subject that I consider retirement to be an un-Christian accommodation to a secular culture—one which should be abandoned.  I want to be useful, in some fashion, to my last breath; to die, so to speak, with my boots on.  For those of you in the audience who don’t share my religious views, I would assert that among every other tradition, including that of atheists, there can be found advocates of a similar conviction.  When I get to the point where I can’t spoon my own soup, God spare me a relative who advocates another round of chemotherapy.  I don’t consider that a species of euthanasia.

8. Is there a systemic way to discourage sloth and gluttony?

There is good evidence that carefully structured incentives and disincentives can nudge people toward healthier choices.  HSAs are the easy way to do it; the effects of diet and exercise save money for the person doing the work.  Moreover, such a system would derail a coming, and ugly, scenario in which overweight people will be persecuted like smokers are now.  But smokers have it easy–after all, they aren’t smoking all the time, whereas fat people are fat 24 hours a day.  When government or insurance companies are paying, it takes a Rube Goldberg arrangement to get the goads in the right place.  But it can be done, as Safeway and Whole Foods have demonstrated recently.

9. President Obama says that electronic medical records will save a lot of money.  Is that true?

There is no evidence to back up this assertion, and plenty to refute it.  EMRs have some value in the delivery of efficient medical care, at some risk to our privacy.  But they won’t save any money, and may reduce productivity.  However, there is one certainty: searchable electronic records will make it easier for Big Government or Big Insurance to decide whether you need the care your physician is prescribing.  Whether this is a good deal depends on your view of 1984 or Brave New World.  That’s heaven for some people, hell for others.

10. What are the unintended consequences of proposed reforms?

Aside from cost explosion and civil war, let’s consider what would happen if the government immediately or eventually takes over responsibility for our health.  I’m going to ignore the status quo (government + insurers), a return to physician control, or the advent of HSAs, which appears remote.  I’m also going to stipulate that Death Panels are not in our future.  OK– the government has to control costs, and the choices are:

10a. Eliminate all profits from Big Pharma by dictating prices, like the Europeans do.  This will save 2% of the national health bill the first year (from 10% to 8% for drugs), and more later, as all pharmaceuticals eventually go generic.  Of course, there would be no more new drugs, so that’s the unintended but inevitable consequence.  Maybe the National Institutes of Health could do the research, as well as fund it; and maybe the executive branch can run General Motors, too.

10b. Nationalize the doctors, and put them on salary.  This would almost certainly reduce costs, because as Mr. Obama has pointed out, if a surgeon isn’t paid more to cut off your foot, he might not.  It would also increase waiting lists, because if the surgeons aren’t paid more to cut off good feet, they also aren’t paid more to cut off bad feet, and so you can bet they’ll be figuring out how to spend more time on the golf course and less in the foot clinic.

10c. Set up the American equivalent of the NICE commission to decide which treatments are cost-effective, and which aren’t.  This is not a bad idea, because some treatments really aren’t cost-effective.  Two problems: first, we don’t know for sure which are and which aren’t (in medical school I was taught that half the stuff I was memorizing was wrong, but the professors didn’t know which half); and second, having decided that drug XYZ is not cost effective for glycogen storage disease type 75b, sure as God made little green apples Senator Blowhard’s daughter will be stricken with– you guessed it, 75b.  Now we’re asking the Senator to number himself among the angels, and avoid interfering in the funding or operations of the Very NICE commission.  Chances?

10d.  I spent five pretty happy years working on salary for the world’s largest HMO, the US Army.  We didn’t have enough resources to do everything we needed, so we practiced “triage by attrition”.  When I arrived for a 6 p.m. shift in the emergency room, 75 people would be waiting.  If I worked hard, I might be able to see 50 in 12 hours, but 50 more would show up by 11 pm.  Nevertheless, by 4 a.m. I could usually take a nap.  What happened?  By ones and twos, the less sick drifted out as the evening wore on.  That’s the way the rest of the world works.  It’s not so bad.  Some people die unnecessarily, but some people die in our country now because they can’t afford care.  The main effect is wasted time and prolonged pain.  And that brings me to:

10e. My mother ran the business office at St. Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City for many years.  As the reputation of the Mid-America Heart Institute grew, more and more business came from wealthy foreigners who decided to jump the queue in their countries by flying to America.  What would happen if America became one of them?  A recent survey by Russia’s Ministry of the Interior found, without irony or outrage, that the average bribe had tripled in the past year.  That’s one way to jump the queue, well known in queue-tolerant nations.  The rich, the well-connected, the governmental employees who set up the system–they’d get their surgeries, one way or another.  And the rest of us?  I mean, the rest ofyou–I’m setting up an ambulatory surgery center in the Caymens.  No lines.  Cash on the barrelhead.  Round-trip airfare from Miami included.

See why I prefer patients to make the choices with HSAs?

I have two porches on the log cabin I built with my own two hands.  As a Republican sitting on either, I see my beloved Kansas woods, where one day my ashes will be scattered.  I work hard every day, doing my honest best to do a good job, contribute constructively to the betterment of my neighbors, and return home to my beloved wife, my beloved dogs, and a cat which I could probably do without.  I think every American wants, and deserves, competent and compassionate health care from a physician who knows them and, in his or her own way, loves them.  I do not think every American deserves, or perhaps even wants, every test, procedure, and intervention which could possibly, under even the extremes of age or disability, be applied to the life left in their vessel of clay.  For those who do: you have my pity, but not my agreement.

How we handle this disagreement, as a nation, is critical.  Sarah Palin (“Obama Death Squads”) and her fellow-travelers have so whipped up the pack that even conservatives are feeling hot breath at town halls.  Writing to physicians several years ago, I predicted that any attempt to impose rationing from above would produce blood in the streets.  We’re getting close, now.  To my mind, only self-rationing– in the form of HSAs, or something similar– could fix health care in a way that acknowledges the unique American character and experience.  Here’s to you, President Sarkozy.

The People Have Questions!

Monday, September 28th, 2009

President Obama has insisted repeatedly that he wishes to hold a serious, good faith dialogue with the American people on health care reform in order to reach a bi-partisan consensus on the direction in which we as a nation need to take it. And yet, time and again, we have seen the White House and its mainstream media lapdogs attack anyone who dares raise a finger in opposition to the president’s proposal, dismissing them as brown shirts and racists. Many of the town hall events sponsored by Democratic legislators over the course of the August congressional recess felt like talking point recitals carefully orchestrated under the watchful eye of the Obama administration rather then constructive open dialogue sessions. Again, opponents who raised concerns about the direction the country was taking under Obama were shouted down, accused of being disruptive and violent.

This is precisely why the Common Sense Citizens Network (CSCN), a grassroots organization of concerned citizens created to fight against big government and rally support for fiscal sanity, personal responsibility, the rule of law, and national sovereignty, have decided to take the president up on his offer to hold an actual conversation with the American people on the state of health care in the United States. The CSCN is requesting the assistance of the American people to vote on their survey in order to select the top ten health care-related questions President Obama has yet to address during the course of this debate.

Some, though certainly far from all, of the questions offered in the survey include …

  • In earlier speeches, you promised the American people that they would be able to keep their health insurance under your plan. More recently, you have chenged the rhetoric to express only that nothing explicitly in the plan will force Americans to change their health insurance. Is it not true that, according to objective third-party analyses, millions of Americans would likely be forced to change their health insurance under your plan? Is there an objective third-party analysis showing that most Americans will continue to have the same options they have today? If so, which ones, and why are they more credible than the analyses coming to a contrary conclusion?
  • You have repeatedly accused the critics of your plan of engaging in ‘lies” and ’scare tactics.’ Do you believe that none of the criticisms of your plan are good faith criticisms? If any of the criticisms are good faith criticisms, which ones?
  • In your speeches, you have repeatedly emphasized that you that you are there to listen, that your door is always open and that you continue to seek common ground. Which ideas, if any, have you incorporated into your health care plan in order to find common ground with Blue Dog Democrats and/or Republicans?
  • If their payments fall and they make less money, won’t there be fewer doctors practicing medicine?
  • Will the law require Members of Congress and federal employees to be enrolled in the “government option/public plan,” and if not, why not?
  • HR3200 requires 500 billion in cuts in Medicare and Medicaid. How can these cuts be made without limiting access to healthcare or medicines recommended by my doctor?
  • How do you expect to meet the growing need for physicians and medical professionals if the government-run plan pays lower than market rates to physicians while forcing them to participate or lose a majority of their patients and their livelihood?
  • Proponents of a government-run option, you included, claim that it will compete on a level playing field with private insurance providers. In that case, will your government-run plan operate as a for-profit model and be forced to pay all applicable state, federal, and local taxes?

Also, if there is a question you would like to ask President Obama regarding health care reform is not in the survey, you may submit your question for inclusion on the list.

The Rejects: Amendments Not Added to Baucuscare Bill

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Remember not too long ago when the DNC ran a television advertisement attacking key Republican legislators, in particular Wisconsin Representative Paul Ryan, for wanting to abolish Medicare? Not surprisingly, that turned out to be a lie. Not only are the Democrats liars on this issue, they are hypocrites as well. An amendment introduced by Republican Utah Senator Orrin Hatch during the Senate Finance Committee’s markup of the America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009 bill yesterday was shot down in a 14-9 vote. Every single Democrat on the committee along with Maine RINO Olympia Snowe opposed the amendment that “would have,” according to the Wall Street Journal, “required a certification that the bill’s section on privately run Medicare plans, which are known as Medicare Advantage plans, would not result in any benefit reductions from those who are enrolled in the private plans. If it were found that benefit reductions would occur, the bill’s language on Medicare Advantage would be eliminated.”

The Hatch Amendment was just one of several intriguing alterations to be rejected from the markup session of Montana Senator Max Baucus’s health care proposal.

Another critical amendment, this one introduced by Kentucky Senator Jim Bunning, “would have required the committee to have the legislative language of its health care bill evaluated by the Congressional Budget Office before voting on it,” according to the American Spectator. It was narrowly defeated in a 12-11 vote, with Arkansas Senator Blanche Lincoln being the sole Democrat on the Senate Committee on Finance to vote in its favor. Key Democrats on the committee complained that such a requirement would delay passage of a bill by weeks. They are right! Why should stupid things like statistics, costs, accountability, etc. get in the way of a socialist agenda? And what was Massachusetts Senator John Kerry’s response? He said, “Let’s be honest about it, most people don’t read the legislative language.” He’s not a doctor, obviously, but if he was, I swear his bedside manner would be terrible.

But perhaps the most important exclusion from Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus’s health care bill yesterday was the amendment introduced by Arizona Senator Jon Kyl to stop the ‘Gag Order.’ The amendment would have simply clarified “that a health plan may, pursuant to constitutional rights guaranteed by the First Amendment, express its views about legislation or legislative proposals.” The Kyl Amendment comes on the heels of the White House’s warning to insurers and health care companies that they could face legal action if they spread what they consider misinformation about the president’s health care bill. Again, why should the truth get in the way of president’s agenda?

Not a single one of the thirteen Democrats on the committee supported the amendment; all ten Republicans, on the other hand, did. And while he does not support this particular amendment, Chairman Max Baucus did admit in a roundabout way that the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) “maybe … overstepped” the limits of its authority. Really? Why, only two days prior to this markup session he was pressing adamantly for the CMS to ‘crack down’ on insurance company ‘scare tactics’ regarding how beneficiaries would be affected by health care reform legislation. It’s amazing how things like the letter of the law and the parameters of what the constitution allows can change in just two days.

Other aborted additions to the Baucuscare bill debacle included a prohibition on a federal rationing board from Senator Jon Kyl and three other amendments, each of which focused on medical liability reform and were introduced individually by senators Jon Kyl, John Ensign (R-Nevada), and John Cornyn (R-Texas).

Florida Medicaid Reform Going Strong

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

Medicaid is, for some states, an even bigger expense than education. That’s just one reason to try new reforms. The James Madison Institute highlights a pilot program enacted in Florida.

JMI president Bob McClure says “Medicaid spending in Florida. It is absolutely unsustainable. … Continuing down this path, state government would not be able to fund core functions such as education and public safety without massive tax increases.”

There’s a better solution than a federal expansion of Medicaid: “Currently, Florida has two pilot projects in Broward and Duval counties that allow Medicaid patients to allocate their own dollars to fit their individual needs. In essence, this pilot project brings market discipline to an out-of-control entitlement program.”

Fictitious Revenues and Savings in Baucus Bill

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

By Grace-Marie Turner

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus spent much of the summer dancing with the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to figure out how to squeeze his health reform bill into its scoring framework and get a positive outcome.Surprise, surprise, he succeeded! The CBO said on Wednesday that the Baucus bill will lead to a “net reduction in the federal budget deficit of $49 billion” over the next 10 years and that 94% of Americans will have health insurance.

But then we get into those devilish details. . .

The revenues and savings are fictitious and only will come about if you take the American people for chumps.

For example, the bill requires individuals to buy health insurance and fines them up to $3,800 a year for a family if they don’t comply. The CBO assumes that people will continue to pay the fine year after year, estimating $20 billion in penalties over six years. (The mandate doesn’t trigger until 2013. And here’s an odd coincidence: That’s just after the next presidential election.)

And they assume that employers will get increasingly stupid, paying more and more in “free-rider penalties” every year, adding up to $27 billion in fines by 2019.

And here’s the biggest revenue raiser: The CBO assumes that people will not change their behavior but will continue to buy Cadillac health insurance and that the government will collect $215 billion from excise taxes on the expensive policies by 2019.

I thought this USA Today story pretty much summed up the onerous individual mandate, employer fines, and new taxes.

And don’t get me started on whether or not they really, truly, will be able to wring more than $500 billion in savings and “efficiencies” out of Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal programs.

Seven Fatal Flaws of Baucus Bill

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

In the last forty-eight hours since Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Montana) released his health care proposal, America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009, much of the focus has been on criticism stemming from the left side of the health care debate. It must be noted, however, that the bill is not viewed without harsh criticism over on the right side of the aisle either.

One of the more vocal groups is The Heritage Foundation and its health care-based project, Fix Health Care Policy. There is general agreement on both sides of the debate that the problem concerns the rising costs of health insurance. While President Obama and the Congressional Democratic leadership believe expanding the federal government’s grip on the health care industry is the solution, Heritage’s analysis, however, is precisely the opposite. They believe promoting personal ownership will give Americans more health choices and force health plans and providers to compete directly for their dollars. The end result, they say, would lower costs and guarantee better quality care.

As far as Baucuscare is concerned, Heritage believes it to be nothing more then a Trojan horse, a public plan cleverly disguised as a co-operative. The Washington D.C.-based think tank concluded that there were seven fatal flaws to the health care proposal. The first is the that Montana senator’s proposal would introduce a new middle-class tax hike that would include a sales tax on drug and medical devices as well as a new federal excise tax on insurance plans that exceed $8,000 for an individual and $21,000 for a family.

Beginning in 2013, Baucus’s health care bill would force everyone in the United States to purchase health insurance that complied with newly instituted federal quality standards, taking the choice out of the hands of the individual and into that of the federal government. Penalties of $750 and $950 would instituted to those three hundred percent below the poverty line and families three times above the poverty line, respectively, who failed to comply with this regulation. But in order to enforce such a requirement, detailed health insurance information on every single American citizen would be collected, significantly reducing patient privacy and bolstering the administrative costs to employers and insurers.

The bill’s other faults, so says Heritage, include the expansion of the already unsustainable Medicaid program, a pay-or-play employer mandate, and the establishment of a value-based purchasing, which, if not followed, would result in lower-Medicare payments for hospitals and physicians, thus biasing their decisions and violating existing federal law on the federal government interfering with the practice of medicine.

Perhaps the most frightening defect is the open invitation the legislation presents for infinite federal control over the ‘co-operative’ through the arraignment of six billion dollars in federal funding for startup loans and grants. This, in turn, would provide Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius with very broad latitude to regulate and/or promote co-ops as she saw fit.

To remedy the situation, the Heritage Foundation offers President Obama two paths he should pursue in the coming days and weeks in the ongoing health care debate:

The President needs to lead by meeting with key leaders of both parties and seek bipartisan reform around two key themes: 1) instead of a one-size-fits-all federal solution, Congress should let the states take the lead on reform, and 2) reform the tax treatment of health insurance to give all taxpayers tax relief for purchasing private insurance and extend assistance (through spending offsets) to low-income families to purchase private insurance instead of expanding government care.

President Obama, however, is unlikely to follow through with either one of these suggestions. He is still naively under the impression that ‘We won, we can do what we want’ and therefore he can Rahm … umm, ram through the public-option proposal without any kind of Republican support whatsoever. It will be yet another brilliant example of how inexperienced and politically inept Barack Obama is, demonstrating even further why it was a mistake to have elected him to serve in the highest office in the land in the first place.

After Starting “Universal” State Insurance Program, Maine has MORE Uninsured

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

By Tarren R. Bragdon

The U.S. Census Bureau last week released updated information on the number of uninsured people in Maine. Maine’s number of uninsured is now 21,000 higher than pre-Dirigo (2004) and the second highest in New England. In contrast, the number of uninsured in neighboring New Hampshire has dropped, despite the fact that New Hampshire’s Medicaid program is less than half as large as Maine’s.

The numbers speak for themselves. The promise of Maine’s public option experiment was to cover all of the state’s uninsured people by 2009 through Dirigo Health. Unfortunately, after spending more than $155 million in taxpayer funds and raising taxes on private health insurance to fund the Dirigo experiment, we now learn that Maine has more uninsured people than before Dirigo began.

The Dirigo policies are expensive with premiums skyrocketing 74% in four years, the benefits have been reduced, the program has been closed to new enrollees for two years, and the taxes to pay for this scheme actually make other health plans more expensive. How much worse does it have to get before Maine politicians can admit that this is not working and should not be duplicated by Congress with a federal government plan like Dirigo?

Two weeks ago, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was in Maine to announce that millions of federal dollars will be spent to help prop up Maine’s Dirigo disaster. Here are several questions that she did not answer, but should have. Given the lack of success in trimming Maine’s uninsured population, how can Maine’s leadership possibly justify taking federal money, during a time of unprecedented federal deficits, to prop up Dirigo?

The latest US Census Bureau figures show Maine’s number of uninsured climbed by 22,000.

  • Maine now has 136,000 non-elderly uninsured, up 22,000 from last year and up from 115,000 in 2004, the first year before Dirigo was implemented (DirigoChoice began covering people on Jan 1, 2005).
  • New Hampshire, with an almost identical size population, actually experienced a drop in the number of uninsured, from 136,000 in 2007 to 131,000 in 2008, despite the fact that NH’s Medicaid program covers 97,000 people compared to Maine’s 223,000 for this same non-elderly population.
  • Maine (at 12.3%) has the second-highest percent uninsured of all the New England states - NH (11.5%), CT (11.4% ), VT (10.6%), MA (6.3%) and RI (13.4%) and the highest in northern New England.

Sen. Enzi: “Getting It Done Fast is Not as Important as Getting It Done Correctly”

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Not long after Senator Max Baucus (D-Montana), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, announced the creation of the America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009, a two hundred and twenty-three page health care reform bill with no bi-partisan support, at noon today in Washington D.C., Senator Mike Enzi (R-Wyoming) released a statement expressing deep disappointment “that deadlines took precedence over agreement between the two political parties.

Senator Enzi, a member of the Gang of Six, the name given to the bi-partisan group of senators (three Democrats and three Republicans) who have attempted to negotiate a compromise in passing a health care reform bill this year, praised Chairman Baucus and Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) in so strongly resisting the “calls for partisanship” within the often heated health care debate. At the same time, however, he said he would be remise in not articulating his acute dissatisfaction in the bi-partisan group’s failure to address major still left unresolved in the bill Sen. Baucus presented earlier today. With the nation facing the likely prospect of a nine trillion dollar federal deficit over the next ten years, it is totally unacceptable that the bill as it stands “still spends too much, and it does too little to cut health care costs for those with health insurance.” Rather then try to cover every single one of the forty-seven million the White House claims are uninsured, Enzi said, we “should target assistance to those in the greatest need without creating unsustainable new entitlement programs.”

The Republican senator said that Baucus’s bill does not go far enough in realizing the goals set down by President Obama who promised through his health care reform bill to “improve competition in the insurance marketplace and lower health care costs for those who currently have insurance.” He expressed the belief that “health care reform should be built on expanding the unsustainable Medicaid program, which 40 percent of doctors will not accept.” Having ‘universal coverage’ is no good to you if your doctor refuses to see you. “If you have Medicare Advantage,” Enzi notes, “this bill could reduce your coverage.”

Regardless of the expressions of exasperations produced by the Obama administration, in particular the president’s call last week in his speech before the joint-session of Congress that “the time for bickering has passed,” “getting it done fast is not as important as getting it done correctly.” The best way in which to reform the American health care system and gain the trust of the public, something this administration severely lacks especially after the failure of the Economic Stimulus Package, “is to do it step by step.”

SEIU Requests Contact Info for Kansas HCBS Providers

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

Current Medicaid law lets some people in Medicaid get home and community-based services (HCBS) rather than having to go to a hospital, clinic or other institution. Understandably, it’s more attractive to patients, though not necessarily cheaper for taxpayers.

The SEIU, a union of government employees is a big fan of ever-greater government involvement in health care, and understandably so: It gives them more opportunities to snag members and their dues.

The SEIU in Kansas has asked the state for the names and addresses of health care professionals who provide care under the state’s HCBS program. A state representative and Kansas Watchdog have some questions about the request, as well as the union’s relationship with former governor and now HHS Secretary, Kathleen Sebelius.

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