Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan
By Kevin Sack | March 16, 2009

BOSTON ? Three years ago, Massachusetts enacted perhaps the boldest state health care experiment in American history, bringing near-universal coverage to the commonwealth with Paul Revere speed.

To make it happen, Democratic lawmakers and Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican, made an expedient choice, deferring until another day any serious effort to control the state?s runaway health costs.

The day of reckoning has arrived. Threatened first by rapid early enrollment in its new subsidized insurance program and now by a withering economy, the state?s pioneering overhaul has entered a second, more challenging phase.

Thanks to new taxes and fees imposed last year, the health plan?s jittery finances have stabilized for the moment. But government and industry officials agree that the plan will not be sustainable over the next 5 to 10 years if they do not take significant steps to arrest the growth of health spending.

With Washington watching, the state?s leaders are again blazing new trails. Both Gov. Deval Patrick, Mr. Romney?s Democratic successor, and a high-level state commission have set out to revamp the way public and private insurers reimburse physicians and hospitals.

They want a new payment method that rewards prevention and the effective control of chronic disease, instead of the current system, which pays according to the quantity of care provided. By late spring, the commission is expected to recommend such a system to the legislature.

If Massachusetts becomes the first state to make this conversion, health policy experts argue that it would be as audacious an achievement as universal coverage. The state faces several hurdles, including securing federal permission to impose the changes on Medicaid, a shared state and federal program, and more unusually on Medicare, which is financed entirely by Washington.

Those who led the 2006 effort said it would not have been feasible to enact universal coverage if the legislation had required heavy cost controls. The very stakeholders who were coaxed into the tent ? doctors, hospitals, insurers and consumer groups ? would probably have been driven into opposition by efforts to reduce their revenues and constrain their medical practices, they said.

Now those stakeholders and the state government have a huge investment to protect. But the task of cost-cutting remains difficult in a state with a long tradition of heavy spending on health care. Massachusetts has more doctors per capita than any state, Boston is home to some of the country?s most expensive academic medical centers, and a new state law requires comprehensive benefits like prescription drug and mental health coverage.

Alan Sager, a professor of health policy at Boston University, has calculated that health spending per person in Massachusetts increased faster than the national average in seven of the last eight years. Furthermore, he said, the gap has grown exponentially, with Massachusetts now spending about a third more per person, up from 23 percent in 1980.

?Just as this may have been the easiest place to do coverage, it may be the most difficult place to do cost control,? said Jonathan Gruber, a health economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

But Mr. Patrick has shown signs of playing tough with the state?s hospitals and insurers. Responding in January to a series in The Boston Globe that exposed how the state?s most influential hospitals negotiate high reimbursement rates, Mr. Patrick announced that he would explore whether the state could regulate insurance premiums.

?Frankly, it?s very hard for the average consumer, or frankly the average governor, to understand how some of these companies can have the margins they do and the annual increases in premiums that they do,? Mr. Patrick said in an interview. ?At some level, you?ve just got to say, ?Look, that?s just not acceptable, and more to the point, it?s not sustainable.? ?

The threat seems to have been heard. Insurers seeking to participate in the state?s subsidized insurance program, Commonwealth Care, recently submitted bids so low that officials announced last week that they would keep premiums flat in the coming year. That may provide cover for the program as the state seeks ways to fill a nearly $4 billion gap in its 2010 budget.

The state expects to spend $595 million more on its health insurance programs this year than in 2006, a 42 percent increase. But about 432,000 people have gained coverage, leaving only 2.6 percent of the population without insurance, according to a recent state survey. At only one-sixth the national average, that is by far the lowest rate in any state.

Massachusetts achieved its high coverage rates by mandating in its landmark law that almost every resident have health insurance, and that all but the smallest businesses make some contribution toward their employees? costs. Those who do not enroll but are deemed able to afford insurance can be fined up to $1,068 in the 2009 tax year.

To make the mandated insurance affordable, the state subsidizes premiums for those earning up to three times the federal poverty level, or $66,150 for a family of four. Massachusetts already had a law requiring insurers to accept all applicants regardless of their health status.

Although nearly 60 percent of the newly insured are covered by public programs, Massachusetts also seems to be a rare state where the percentage of employers offering health benefits is actually growing. And the state government has realized substantial savings, worth about $250 million last year, from lower payments to hospitals for uncompensated care for the uninsured and underinsured.

In its first full year of operation, Commonwealth Care drew higher enrollment than anticipated, and the state found itself facing an inaugural budget gap. Mr. Patrick and the legislature filled it by assessing insurers and hospitals, raising the penalty on noncompliant businesses, increasing premiums and co-payments for consumers, and raising the state tobacco tax.

The fear was that such tree-shaking would become an annual ritual. But enrollment in the $820 million Commonwealth Care program peaked last May and then declined before hitting a plateau.

Some modest provisions to control costs were included in the original health care bill, including a merger of the small group and individual insurance markets and new spending on electronic record-keeping and hospital infection control.

More efforts were made last year in legislation that provided incentives for doctors to practice primary care, required uniform billing procedures among providers, toughened the state?s regulation of new hospital construction, and established the payment reform commission.

The commission is looking at various options, but all would do away with the fee-for-service system, which provides perverse incentives by paying physicians and hospitals for each patient visit. The changes under consideration include reimbursing for episodes of care rather than individual visits and bundling payments to groups of providers who would together take responsibility for a patient?s health.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts, the state?s largest insurer, recently devised an innovative model that pays doctors a flat fee per patient, with adjustments for age, gender and health status, and then adds bonus payments for high standards of care.

Blue Cross officials say they believe that the new plans can cut the growth of premiums in half over five years and expect them to account for 15 percent of their business by June. ?We?re very committed to this path because we feel it?s the only credible place to go,? said Cleve L. Killingsworth, the company?s chairman.

Some health policy experts argue that changes in payment practices will not be enough to slow the growth in spending, even when combined with other cost-cutting strategies. To truly change course, they say, the state and federal governments may need to place actual limits on health spending, which could lead to rationing of care.

?Really controlling costs requires just stopping spending,? said Stuart H. Altman, a professor of health policy at Brandeis University.

Because Massachusetts now requires its residents to be insured, it cannot fall back on the strategy used by other states in hard times ? to simply remove people from the public insurance rolls by restricting eligibility.

?It forces us to look in the mirror and say, ?What do we do about health care spending?? ? said Jon M. Kingsdale, executive director of the agency that administers Commonwealth Care. ?And the reason that?s so challenging is that it means limiting resources for people doing really good stuff.

?It?s not like the fat sits out here easily identified and you just slice it off. It?s marbled throughout the meat.?

http://www.boston. com/news/ education/ higher/articles/ 2009/03/16/ massachusetts_ faces_costs_ of_big_health_ care_plan? mode=PF
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Ladies and gentlemen.... the above article is EXHIBIT A as to why nationalized or socialized healthcare should never be considered.

Now I fully support the right of the state of Massachusetts being able to provide healthcare for anyone it wants to. This is a GREAT example of Federalism at work.

However, you can now see the issues involved.

The bottom line is that it must be PAID for somehow. You must do one of the following:

1. Essentially enslave medical professionals to the government to provide healthcare for the people...

or

2. Simply TAKE the money from your citizenry to PAY for everyone's healthcare.

It boils down to that, my friends.
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

In theory, federalism is good but in reality state governments can't stand up to corporations, they get bullied. Corporations can play one state against another and in the process acquire a lot of power in terms of tax credits and state subsidies. The population gets squeezed.

There's only 2 1st world nations that I know of that don't have some form of nationalized healthcare, the US and that beacon of progress, South Africa.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

In theory, federalism is good but in reality state governments can't stand up to corporations, they get bullied. Corporations can play one state against another and in the process acquire a lot of power in terms of tax credits and state subsidies. The population gets squeezed.

There's only 2 1st world nations that I know of that don't have some form of nationalized healthcare, the US and that beacon of progress, South Africa.


Sorry Driver...

You can't pull the "corporation" card here.

Healthcare MUST be paid for by either enslaving health care professionals or by PILFERING money from the citizens. Which shall it be?
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Sorry Driver...

You can't pull the "corporation" card here.

Healthcare MUST be paid for by either enslaving health care professionals or by PILFERING money from the citizens. Which shall it be?

Pilfering huh?

So we don't have to care if the widow who lives down the street can afford her medication? It's perfectly nature and humane to espouse that that viewpoint? One's opinions and attitudes aren't being influenced by outside forces in that instance? I don't buy that for a minute.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Pilfering huh?

So we don't have to care if the widow who lives down the street can afford her medication? It's perfectly nature and humane to espouse that that viewpoint? One's opinions and attitudes aren't being influenced by outside forces in that instance? I don't buy that for a minute.

Yes. With the way that the federal government spends money, I would call it pilfering. What would you call it?
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

When it doesn't serve the public interest, then yes, I agree it's philfering. Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending big government. I'm defending the widow who struggles to afford her medication.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

When it doesn't serve the public interest, then yes, I agree it's philfering. Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending big government. I'm defending the widow who struggles to afford her medication.

But should it be up to EVERYONE that the widow gets her medication?
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

But should it be up to EVERYONE that the widow gets her medication?


Realistically, I don't think it can be done individually, it has to be done collectively through the State. Acting strictly as an agent of the people, NOT as a power center.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Realistically, I don't think it can be done individually, it has to be done collectively through the State. Acting strictly as an agent of the people, NOT as a power center.


Even still... the money must be TAKEN from EVERYONE. You have yet to tell me WHY this must happen.
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Even still... the money must be TAKEN from EVERYONE. You have yet to tell me WHY this must happen.

Money has to be taken from everyone to construct roads and build schools. It's for the public good or in the public's interest. It's good for a society have a bunch of healthy people.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Money has to be taken from everyone to construct roads and build schools. It's for the public good or in the public's interest. It's good for a society have a bunch of healthy people.

Roads and schools are free to use by anyone...

A person's HEALTH should be their own concern, not mine. Why should I have to pay to keep someone NOT RELATED TO ME healthy?
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Roads and schools are free to use by anyone...

A person's HEALTH should be their own concern, not mine. Why should I have to pay to keep someone NOT RELATED TO ME healthy?



I honestly believe that humans at their core, really care about the well being of other humans. If they don't, something in their life probably has influenced them to go against their nature human instinct.

Why do so many nations have some form of national healthcare?

Countries like Israel, England and Austrailia are hardly leftist leaning.
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

I honestly believe that humans at their core, really care about the well being of other humans. If they don't, something in their life probably has influenced them to go against their nature human instinct.

It's my belief that human beings attempt to find new ways to destroy one another and themselves all the time.

Why do so many nations have some form of national healthcare?

Countries like Israel, England and Austrailia are hardly leftist leaning.

They place power and trust with their government. I do not.
 

Doc Mercer

EOG Master
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Dawg .... you are soooo right:

It's my belief that human beings attempt to find new ways to destroy one another and themselves all the time.


I have gotten to the pt where I realize my best friends are my 2 Shepherds
 
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

The amount of money being discussed is trivial compared to trillions of dollars wasted on Iraq and corporate bailouts/bonuses. The government should perform some functions that actually help Americans who are taken advantage of by corporations. With unemployment at the level it is, there must be some efforts to protect healthcare coverage rather than throwing money away on other things.
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

It's my belief that human beings attempt to find new ways to destroy one another and themselves all the time.




They place power and trust with their government. I do not.

Universal healthcare isn't a gift from the government. It comes from people demanding it.
 

driver8

EOG Addicted
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

It's my belief that human beings attempt to find new ways to destroy one another and themselves all the time.



They place power and trust with their government. I do not.


I think that's true but only when people are atomized or subjected to forces like nationalism or organized religion. It's not normal or natural for people to want to destroy each other.
 

Doc Mercer

EOG Master
Re: Massachusetts Faces Costs of Big Health Care Plan

Bush 43 needs a job!!!


Lets bring him back ... do we have any folks that "are feeling the urge?"
 
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