Title: Financing%20Healthcare%20and%20The%20Uninsured
1Financing Healthcare and The Uninsured
- Kiersten Adams
- Jay Singerman
- Jen Storch
- Ashley Thomas
- James Trinidad
2Agenda
- Overview of Financing
- Overview of The Uninsured
- Key Issues for Republicans
- Key Issues for Democrats
- Current Legislation
- Proposed Legislation
3Overview of Financing
4Overview- Medicare
- Medicare- started in 1965 with Title XVIII of the
social security amendments - Medicare-
- Part A- Hospital Insurance
- Part B- Supplemental Medical Insurance
- Part C- Medicare Advantage
- Part D- Prescription Drug Coverage
5Overview- Medicaid
- Medicaid- started in 1965 with Title XIX of the
social security amendments - States determine eligibility, receive portion of
funding from Federal government
6Employer- Sponsored Blue Cross Blue Shield
- Employer-Sponsored Plans
- 19th century Europe- to compensate for dangerous
jobs - WWII wage controls
- 1954- HI benefits tax deductible to employers
- Blue Cross Blue Shield
- 1930s- community-based, voluntary, not for
profit - Blue Cross- Hospitalization
- Blue Shield- Physician Services
7National Health Expenditures
- In 2004, national health expenditures equaled
1.8 trillion - Expected to increase approximately 8 annually
- 17 of the GDP, increasing annually
- U.S. health care spending is expected to increase
at similar levels for the next decade reaching 4
TRILLION in 2015, or 20 percent of GDP - Trends equate to higher premiums, higher out-of
pocket spending and higher taxes
8Self-Pay v. Third-Party Spending
- Self-Pay 12.6 of all healthcare expenditures
- Third-Party 87.4
- Percentage of third-party spending increased
dramatically from the 1950s-1990s and has since
been stagnant
9Public v. Private Spending
- Private 54.9 of all healthcare expenditures
- Public 45.1
- Public spending has been increasing dramatically
- 32 of Americans are covered by Medicare or
Medicaid
10Financing Trends
- Healthcare is unique because the person who pays
is often not the person who receives health
services - Financing has shifted from individuals to
employers and the government
11Financing Trends
- Premiums are increasing faster than inflation and
increases in wages - Many employers are no longer offering health
benefits - Therefore, an increasing number of people can no
longer afford health insurance - Those who can are facing increased premiums,
deductibles, employee contributions and taxes
12Overview of the Uninsured
13Number of Uninsured
- Number reached 46.1 million in 2005
- 80 of these live in households below 300 of the
poverty level - 25 eligible for SCHIP or Medicaid
- 56 not eligible, but need assistance in
obtaining private insurance
14Characteristics of Uninsured
- With Children
- Predominantly US Citizens
- Majority have one worker in family
- Mostly Hispanic
- Live primarily in South
- Without Children
- Predominantly US Citizens
- 56 come from families with no workers
- Mostly White
- Live primarily in the West and Northeast
15Health Status by Race/Ethnicity and Income
16Health Insurance Coverage by Race/Ethnicity
17Uninsured among those who work
18Uninsured Children
- 8 million are uninsured
- 74 are eligible for SCHIP
- 60 of these children live in families with
income at FPL
19Characteristics of Uninsured Children
- Mostly teens
- 25 under age 6
- 40 Hispanic
- 33 White
- 18 Black
- 85 US Citizens
- Live mostly in West and South
20Characteristics of Uninsured above 300 FPL
- Age 19-29 with income above 300 FPL more likely
to be uninsured - Hispanics with income above 300 FPL
- More likely to have one worker in a small firm
- Less likely to report excellent or very good
health
21Illegal Aliens (AKA Undocumented Non-US Citizens)
- Comprise 5 million of the uninsured
- NOT eligible for public assistance programs
- Numbers skew uninsured characteristics
22Elderly Without Health Insurance
- Some have only Medicare Part A to fall back on
- 17 (41 million) of those 65 and older have no
other insurance
23Access and Outcomes for Uninsured
- Study used Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys to
assess peoples SES, insurance coverage and
access to care. - Found
- Those uninsured who have an injury or new chronic
condition have trouble accessing care and it
takes longer for them to return to full health - No difference in referral of additional services
(PT, Home Health, etc) - More difficult to obtain health insurance in the
future - Those with chronic conditions less likely to
receive treatment beyond initial consultation.
24Why are so many uninsured?
- Lack of employer sponsored insurance
- Health costs are outpacing inflation increases
- Limited Medicaid coverage for low income adults
- Variations in state economies
25Key Issues for Republicans
26Republican Views
- Freedom to Choose Health Savings Accounts
- Individuals to Choose Their Own Health Insurance
Benefits - Providing More Affordable Health Care Choices by
Expanding Competition - Expanding Coverage Options for the Working
Uninsured
27Task Force on Health Care Costs and the Uninsured
- 2004
- Republican Senate Majority
- Senator Judd Gregg, chairman
28Proposed Solutions
- Create incentives for young adults to purchase
lifetime, portable insurance - Improve enrollment in existing public programs
- Association Health Plans
- Encourage more doctor and provider participation
in the safety net of care
29On National Health Care
- BUSH Im absolutely opposed to a national health
care plan. I dont want the federal government
making decisions for consumers or for providers.
I remember what the administration tried to do in
1993. They tried to have a national health care
plan, and fortunately it failed. I trust people
I dont trust the federal government. I dont
want the federal government making decisions on
behalf of everybody.
30Reasons Why Not
- Inefficiency of federal government
- Decrease in patient flexibility
- Reduce doctor flexibility
- Healthy people to pay the burden
- No benefit to be a practicing physician
31Defending John Q.
- an uninsured worker who forces doctors at
gunpoint to treat his son - a legitimate right doesn't impose obligations on
anyone else
32Competition
- "Competition must be seen as a process in which
people acquire and communicate knowledge - Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek
33Competition
- Where real market competition can be found in
health care, it drives quality upward and prices
downward - Laser eye surgery cosmetic surgery
34Competition- The Problems
- we have disabled market competition throughout
the health care sector - too little competition, too little choice, and
too little attention paid to costs and quality.
35Health Savings Accounts
- Medical savings account
- accompanied by a health plan with a high
deductible
36Health Savings Accounts
- reduce medical spending by making consumers more
sensitive to the costs of care - together with high-deductible health plans should
encourage consumers to make prudent treatment
decisions because they are spending their own
money
37Key Issues for Democrats
38Unimaginable Choices
- A severely disabled mans wife leaves her
low-paying service sector job (which did provide
health benefits) so she can care for her
increasingly frail husband - Although he qualifies for Medicare they cannot
afford the 600 a month in prescriptions he
requires - In desperation she takes another service sector
job, but it doesnt offer benefits and now she
cant help her husband
NCMJ January/February 2002, Volume 63, Number 1
39Uninsured
- The above stories represent just some of the
causes for uninsured status - Others include
- - small business who cannot afford health
coverage - - low income populations not realizing their
eligibility status
40Results
- These people will either delay treatment as long
as possible, or they will simply not get care - When they do get care, it often is in a free
clinic, public hospital, or emergency room - Now, their condition has become far more serious
and expensive to treat because of the delay
41What must happen next?
- Uninsured Americans have
- - Limited access to medical care
- - Social/physiological environment that
increases their vulnerability to disease - - Differences in life-style that account for
differences in health rates - Uninsured Americans need programs that will help
remedy their plight!
42Democratic Views
- Democrats aim to pursue a legislative agenda that
reflects the interests of middle- and
working-class Americans - Democrats want to extend health insurance to
people who cannot afford coverage - The following will be major issues for
consideration
43Three Major Issues
- 1. Expanding insurance to as many children of
low-income families as possible - Empowering Medicare to negotiate prices of
prescription drugs - Eliminate health insurance companies
discrimination on the basis of pre-existing
conditions -
44Boost S-CHIP
- Title XXI of Social Security Act jointly
financed by Federal State governments and
administered by the States - Democrats must focus on expanding insurance to as
many children of low-income families as possible - SCHIP offers states federal funds for insurance
coverage for children
NEJM, Volume 3561-4, Jan. 4th, 2007 Centers for
Medicare/Medicaid Services DHHS
45S-CHIP
- Families that do not currently have health
insurance may be eligible - States have different eligibility rules, but in
most, uninsured children under the age of 19,
whose families earn up to 36,200 a year (for a
family of four) are eligible. - This insurance pays forÂ
- - doctor visits
- - prescription medicines
- - immunizations
- - hospitalizations
- - emergency room visits
http//www.insurekidsnow.gov/
46S-CHIP
- We must provide more funding to local health
departments - In 2005, 8.3 million children w/o coverage
- Pelosi has said repeatedly that she will take up
her gavel "on behalf of America's children"
47Prescription Drugs
- The current Medicare Rx drug law has failed to
slow the rapid growth in drug prices they are
not containing drug price inflation - Big drug companies report record profits and
seniors pay higher drug prices
http//www.house.gov/pelosi/ http//www.wvec.com/n
ews/health/stories/wvec_medical_011207_medicare_dr
ugs_house.32d0fd62.html
48Tricky
- One way to win discounts is to favor some drugs
over others - Beneficiaries could face a more limited choice of
medications - Lobbyists may influence which drugs are available
- Pharmaceutical industry could discourage the
development of new drugs
Washington Post December 9, 2006 Article
AR2006120801578
49Mandatory Discounts on Drugs
- Dept of Veterans Affairs negotiates effectively
to secure better prices for the 4.4 million
veterans who use its drug benefit - "43 million people can have the purchasing power
to perhaps encourage these drug houses to give
the government and the American retirees a better
price" - - John Dingell, D-Mich., Chairman of the House
Energy and Commerce Committee
Piper Report http//www.piperreport.com/archives/
2007/01/medicare_drug_p.html http//www.wvec.com/n
ews/health/stories/wvec_medical_011207_medicare_dr
ugs_house.32d0fd62.html
50Comprehensive Health Insurance
- Provide health insurance coverage to Americans
who would not have it due to a pre-existing
condition - Not a welfare or entitlement program
- You must pay premiums to participate in this plan
- Comprehensive major medical indemnity plan for
persons not eligible for Medicare
http//www.illinoislegalaid.org/index.cfm?fuseacti
onhome.dsp_contentcontentID256
51Current Legislation
52Current Reform Proposals
- Massachusetts
- Requires everyone to purchase health insurance
- Connecter links individuals with the insurance
plan that is right for them - Employers with over 10 employees must offer a
plan or possibly pay into a state insurance pool
(debate between gov. and leg.) - Government subsidizes those who are unable to
afford coverage - Enforcement through income tax penalties
53Current Reform Proposals
- California
- Focus on preventative care
- Everyone must purchase insurance, no employer
mandate - Low income individuals will be offered expanded
state insurance and will be provided financial
assistance to purchase insurance through a state
pool - Insurers will be required to guarantee coverage
and charge like prices for like populations. - State program reimbursement rates to providers
will increase - Providers will take on responsibility for
enrollment - Will uses tax penalties to enforce the mandate
54State of the Union and Financing Health Care
www.youtube.com/watch?vICEwfkNxhkA
55Proposed Legislation
56Proposed Legislation Part 1
- Standard deduction
- All health insurance becomes subject to income
tax above the tax deductible amount - Singles can deduct up to 7,500
- Families can deduct up to 15,000
- Standard deduction follows MPI
- Eliminates tax-deductible health care
expenditures incurred by employers
57Rationale Standard Deduction
- Higher wages and health expenditure visibility
- Consumer choice between taxed wages and mostly
non-taxed health insurance - Increases visibility of health care costs
- Level playing-field
- Non-employer-sponsored health insurance tax code
penalization - Penalizes non-employer sponsored health insurance
- Penalizes less expensive employer-sponsored
insurance - With standard deduction, all workers receive tax
benefits
58Proposed Legislation Part 2
- Affordable Choices Initiatives (ACI)
- Provide States financial incentives to make
basic, affordable private health insurance
policies available - Shifts funds aimed at alleviating bad debts
expenditures of health care providers to insuring
the uninsured - HHS and states work closely to find innovative
ways to insure uninsured in each states market
59Rationale ACI
- Allocation of funds for more efficiency
- Theoretically, fiscally-neutral
- Publicly-funded health expenditures have risen
- State reduction inefficient expenditures can be
supported with reallocated federal funds (e.g.,
Medicaid) - Competition consumer-directed health care
(CDHC) - Combined with the standard deduction, the market
of health insurance will be more accessible to
more consumers - Increases in competition among health insurance
plans - Affordability and responsibility brought to
consumer - Deregulation
60Target Groups Standard Deduction
- Winners
- 80 of employees receive tax benefits or choose
higher wages - Neutral
- 20 of employees generous health care policy
owners will have to decide between higher taxed
wages or better, but taxed health care coverage - Losers
- Employers tax-deductible health expenditures
will disappear
61Target Groups ACI
- Winners
- Uninsured and hard-to-insure peoples with more
innovation in the individual markets, the number
of privately-insured will rise - Tax-payers with more privately-insured, the less
government needs to pay for health care thus,
less tax-payers dollars can be better allocated - Out-patients services increases in number of
insured increases utilization of out-patient
services - Neutral
- Hospitals with less uninsured patients,
hospitals will receive less government subsidies,
but they will also be able to allocate care to
more deserving health needs
62Mechanism Standard Deduction ACI
- Increasing the risk pools
- Higher wages and a non-restrictive benefit plan
offered by employers under standard deduction
will allow employees to shop around - ACIs may allow uninsured to shop in same market
- E.g., Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector
- Increased visibility of health-care costs
- A standard deductible will allow peoples to
realize the actual cost of health insurance - Combined with cafeteria and other CDHC plans
proposed via ACIs, both the uninsured and insured
will purchase only what they need
63Financing Standard Deduction ACI
- Government intervention
- Fiscally neutral solution
- It shifts tax-deductible health expenses from
employer to employee - Successful ACIs may shift cost of uninsured unto
insurance companies rather than tax-payers - ACIs income-related subsidies/premium assistance
- Market forces
- More consumers in non-employer sponsored market
more competition - Aided by CDHC, e.g., HSAs
64Limitations
- Standard deduction limitations
- Higher wages misplaced priorities
- More consumer choice will cause adverse (and
favorable) selection - The ability for consumers to jump in-and-out of
risk pools due to favorable selection by
insurance companies may cause adverse selection
for sicker patients - Can be remedied by subsidies and other
interventions - Assumes that consumers can be responsible for
their own health care - Though employers can still be a source of a risk
pool, other sources of risk pool may arise, from
small pools made up of likeminded people to
connector plans instituted by the govt
65Strengths
- Considered fiscally neutral
- Incremental, but bold
- Increased consumer awareness (transparency) of
health care costs drives - Increases in private health insurance
expenditures, which drives - Bigger risk pools, which drives
- Lower premiums, which results in
- A greater number of insured
66References
- Levit, Katharine, Cathy Cowen, Business,
Households and Governments Helathcare Costs
1990- Healthcare Financing Trends, Helathcare
Financing Review. http//findarticles.com/p/artic
les/mi_m0795/is_n2_v13/ai_12160563. - Smith, Cynthia, Cathy Cowan, Stephen Heffler,
Aaron Catlin, and the National Health Accounts
Team, National Health Spending in 2004 Recent
Slowdown Led by Prescription Drug Spending,
Health Affairs Vol. 25, No. 1 (January/February
2006) 186-196.
67References
- Centers for Medicare/Medicaid Services
http//www.cms.hhs.gov/LowCostHealthInsFamChild/ - North Carolina Medical Journal January/February
2002, Volume 63, Number 1 - AARP Public Policy Institute, August 2002
- The Health Insurance In The Private Sector (HIPS)
Survey of Private Sector Firms September 2001
http//www.moh.gov.jo/phr_studies/hips.htm - New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 3561-4,
Jan. 4th, 2007 - Illinois Green Party http//www.ilgp.org/new-grou
ps/media/ilgp-press-coverage/can-state-s-uninsured
-be-helped/view - U.S. Chamber of Commerce http//www.uschamber.com
/issues/index/health/ahps.htm - Health Resources and Services Adminstration
http//www.insurekidsnow.gov/ - http//www.house.gov/pelosi/
- Washington Post December 9, 2006 Article
AR2006120801578 - Piper Report http//www.piperreport.com/archives/
2007/01/medicare_drug_p.html - http//www.wvec.com/news/health/stories/wvec_medic
al_011207_medicare_drugs_house.32d0fd62.html - Illinois Legal Aid http//www.illinoislegalaid.or
g/index.cfm?fuseactionhome.dsp_contentcontentID
256
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