Title: Strategies for Increasing Healthcare Access
1Strategies for Increasing Healthcare Access
Flávio Casoy (adapted from Kao-Ping Chua and
Vanessa Calderón) Jack Rutledge FellowAmerican
Medical Student Association
2- It takes more than medical school to make a
physician!
3- AMSA - the nations OLDEST and LARGEST
independent health professional student
association - Entirely Student Led.
- Over 68,000 members.
- Over a million community service hours each year.
- For 58 years, a progressive voice in American
medicine. - Unites the voices of physicians-in-training to
fight for a healthcare and medical education
system that reflect OUR values!!
4International perspective
Total Spending on Health Care, 2005
Source OECD Health Data 2007
5International perspective
Health Care Spending per Capita, 2005
Source OECD Health Data 2007
6Health status and outcomes
Life Expectancy at Birth, 2004-5
Source OECD Health Data 2007
7Health status and outcomes
Infant Mortality, 2004-5
Source OECD Health Data 2007
8Outline
- Insurance Coverage in the U.S. Health Care System
- Strategies for Increasing Health Care Access
Pros and Cons
9Insurance Coverage in the US Health Care System
10Health insurance coverage of non-elderly
population
11Profile of the uninsured
- 47.0 million Americans
- 81 from working families
- 52-59 from low-income families (200 FPL)
- 80 are adults
- 50 are ethnic minorities
- 79 are American citizens
Source Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the
Uninsured Source US Census Bureau
12Health insurance coverage of non-elderly
population
13Employer-sponsored insurance
- Offered by employers as part of benefits package
- Administered by private insurance companies
(for-profit and non-profit) - Employer pays bulk of premium employee pays
remainder - Significant erosion of employer-sponsored
insurance in recent years
14Health insurance coverage of non-elderly
population
15Individual insurance
- Purchased directly by people who do not get
coverage through their employers - Non-group (individual) plans
- Premiums based on individual health risk
- High-risk individuals with limited access
- High Deductibles
- Administratively expensive
16Health insurance coverage of non-elderly
population
17Medicare
- Covers elderly (ages 65 and older) and
non-elderly with disabilities - Administered by the federal government
(essentially a single-payer system) - Financed through
- Federal income taxes
- Payroll taxes
- Out-of-pocket payments by enrollees
18Medicare
- Four parts
- Part A hospital insurance
- Part B supplemental insurance
- Part C managed care
- Part D prescription drugs
- Significant coverage gaps - most enrollees obtain
supplemental insurance - Spending growth generally slower than private
insurance - Aging population and increased technology
presents challenges for the future
19Medicaid
- Covers certain low-income individuals not every
poor person is covered! - Administered by state governments
- Often out-sourced to non-government
administrators - Financed jointly by the state and federal
governments - Benefits are fairly comprehensive, but many
providers wont take care of Medicaid patients
20Minimum Medicaid Eligibility Levels, 2004
Income eligibility levels as a percent of the
Federal Poverty Level
Note The federal poverty level was 10,488 for a
single person and 16,079 for a family of three
in 2006. SOURCE Cohen Ross and Cox, 2004 and
KCMU, Medicaid Resource Book, 2002.
21State Childrens Health Insurance Program (S-CHIP)
- Supplements Medicaid by covering low-income
children who are ineligible for Medicaid - Administered and financed similarly to Medicaid
- Similar problems to Medicaid
- Low reimbursement rates ? some providers refuse
to accept S-CHIP - Under-enrollment
- Eligibility varies by specific populations and
states
22Strategies for Increasing Healthcare Access
23Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
24Tax credits
- AMA plan - offer tax credits to people to
purchase health insurance. - Tax credits would be
- Inversely related to income
- Contingent upon purchase of health insurance
- Refundable
- Advanceable
- Financed by repeal of tax subsidy
25Tax credits - pros
- Makes health insurance available to more people
- Keeps current system in place
- Tax infrastructure already in place
- May increase choice of insurance plans
26Tax credits - cons
- Not universal
- Builds on individual market (inefficient and
discriminatory) - Problems of current system would remain
- Employers tempted to drop coverage
- No cost controls
- No guarantee that competition will help
- Does not take co-pays and deductibles into
consideration
27Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
28Individual mandates
- Force everyone to have health insurance through
some mechanism - Employer-based
- Medicaid
- Individual market
- People would pay a penalty for not having health
insurance -
29Individual mandates - pros
- Achieves close to universal coverage
- Easily understood
- Leaves current system in place
- Appeals to anti-freeriding ethic
-
30Individual mandates - cons
- High cost of purchasing health insurance
- Disproportionately burdensome to low-income
individuals - Builds on inefficient individual market
- No cost controls
- Difficulty and cost of enforcing mandate
- Deductibles, co-pays
-
31Individual mandates - cons
- Massachusetts Individual Mandate
- Single, male, 26 year-old, earning 301 FPL -
2,631 per month, in Framingham, MA - Premium 150/month
- Drugs 30/generics, 50 for brand names
- Co-pay 25 per doctor visit, 100 per ED
- Procedure, Study, or Hosp stay 2000 Deductible
20 co-insurance - 5000 max out of pocket (not counting drugs or
visits to doctors or EDs)
32Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
33Employer mandates
- Variation 1 Employers forced to provide health
benefits to employees - Variation 2 Play-or-pay employers provide
health benefits that meets certain standards or
submit to payroll tax to fund public coverage for
employees -
34Employer mandates
- Low-wage employers temporarily subsidized
- Expansion of Medicaid for unemployed or others
who dont get health insurance through their
employer -
35Employer mandates - pros
- Achieves close to universal coverage
- Builds on current system
- Levels the playing field for employers
- People like getting health insurance from their
employer (mostly) - Most of new cost is hidden from employees
-
36Employer mandates - cons
- Opposition from many businesses
- Disproportionately burdensome for small
businesses - Implicit tax on employees (lower wages)
- Potential layoffs of low-wage jobs
- Inhibits creation of new jobs
- No cost controls
- Disadvantages of employer-based system
(non-portability, economic strain on businesses) -
37Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
38Public program expansion
- Expand eligibility of Medicaid, S-CHIP, and other
public programs to more people - Examples
- Expansion by income cover everyone under 200
of poverty level - Expansion by demographic cover childless adults
39Public program expansion - pros
- May lead to universal coverage eventually (pincer
strategy) - Infrastructure largely in place already
- Leaves current system in place
- Potential political support to expand access to
some groups (esp. children)
40Public program expansion - cons
- Not necessarily universal coverage
- Anti-welfare sentiment
- Lack of a political voice of potential
beneficiaries - Access problems with Medicaid/S-CHIP
- May be seen as unjust
- May take the wind out of the sails of more
comprehensive reforms
41Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
42National health insurance
- NHI having a health insurance plan that is
available to everyone - Does not specify financing (single payer vs.
multi payer) - Does not specify whether DELIVERY of health care
is public or private
43Countries with NHI
(South Africa)
Industrialized countries without NHI? only one
44Example of NHI Single payer
- Government becomes main reimburser of health care
providers - Universal coverage for defined services
- Automatic enrollment
- Private insurance for supplemental benefits
- Financed by taxes, offset by less premiums
- Delivery remains mostly private
45Single payer - pros
- Universal coverage
- Greatly reduced administrative costs
- Coverage is portable (not tied to employment)
- Free choice of doctors and hospitals
- Very little uncompensated care
- Greater potential to control costs
- More rational and efficient allocation of
resources and technology
46Single payer - cons
- No choice in insurance plans
- Potential for underfunding by hostile government
or recession - Potential for mismanagement
- Politically more difficult
- Special interests
- Transition period
- Resistance to taxes
47Public Program Expansions Medicaid, CHIP,
Medicare
Do nothing market will fix itself
National Health Insurance
Tax credits
Individual Mandates
Employer Mandates
Individual Commodity
Public Good
U.S. system
Health care system adopted by every other
industrialized democracy
48Conclusion How do you evaluate a solution?
- Every solution has disadvantages, no matter what.
Based on your values, you can select which
disadvantages are outweighed by the advantages. - If you value a profit-driven industry that sees
healthcare as a commodity, tax credits may be
appealing. - If you value universality and comprehensiveness,
NHI may be appealing.
49What does AMSA support?
- For the last 15 or so years, AMSA has supported a
public, single, national health insurance system
to ensure that everyone has access to affordable,
quality heatlhcare. - Actively fight for sCHIP, Medicare, Medicaid,
Community Health Centers, Title VII, and much
more.
50More Ways To Get Involved
- JOIN MEDICAL STUDENTS JUST LIKE YOU JOIN AMSA!
- www.amsa.org
- Attend Your Regional Conference
- 1,2,3 Nov 9th Nov 11th Portland, ME
51Opportunities
- Universal Healthcare Leadership Institute
- September 29-October 1, 2007 (Apps closed)
- SeaCouver
- Feb 6-10, 2008 (Application Due on Nov 18)
- Venezuelan Health Systems Study Tour
- April 7-13, 2008
- Jack Rutledge Internship
- All the time
52- Flávio Casoy
- American Medical Student Association
- Jack Rutledge Fellow for Universal Health Care
and - Eliminating Health Disparities
- jrf_at_amsa.org
- (703) 620-6600 ext. 256