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Lessons from MA reform

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MA had a highly regulated insurance market with guarantee issue ... 'skinny' products could have entered our market without solving coverage needs. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lessons from MA reform


1
Lessons from MA reform
  • The good, the bad, and the ugly

2
Incrementalism made MA reform easier
  • Access was expanded over 15 years with reforms.
    Chapter 58 built on those reforms
  • MA had been aggressive with FFP funding and 1115
    Waivers in the past
  • MA had a highly regulated insurance market with
    guarantee issue
  • ESI in MA much stronger than the rest of U.S.

3
MA incremental reforms
4
MA took money for free care and
  • Expanded S-Chip from 200 to 300 FPL
  • Removed eligibility caps on Medicaid (MassHealth)
    (about 75,000). Still no caps on eligibility
  • Commonwealth Care-subsidized for those under 300
    FPL (about 175,000 insured). Provided by MMCOs
    currently in market. Public design and
    financing, private insurance.
  • Commonwealth Choice and private insurance-not
    subsidized, for individual and small businesses
    (about 21,000 CommChoice and 170,000 private).
    Only now expanding CommChoice into small business
    market
  • Used close to one billion in the free care pool
    as funding for insurance coverage CMS tied this
    to ending the IGT payments and special funding to
    big DSH hospitals within 3 years (now).

5
MA the National Context
  • MA represents 2 of the national population
  • MA is responsible for 24 of the decline
    nationally in the number of uninsured

6
MA pays coverage by
  • Provider tax 160M 20M
  • Insurers 160M 33M from reserves
  • Businesses Increased who covered by fair and
    reasonable (25 take-up, 33 payment), and 35M
    from MSTF
  • Consumers increased co-pays and premiums
    Tobacco tax of 150M

7
MA built reform around ESI
  • MA decided to build around ESI so that employer
    was not lost to finance health insurance
    coverage
  • People are generally happy with their ESI- high
    quality, low deductible plans, with average
    Employer payment of premiums at 75 coverage of
    premiums for both individual and family
  • There has not yet been crowd-out, with the number
    insured by ESI growing 160,000. From 68 to 72
    ESI covered.
  • Has added more admin complexity
  • 60,000 or 10 of all uninsured have ESI but cant
    afford it. This will be true nationally and a
    problem MA has not been able to address.
  • ERISA is an obstacle to changing insurance and
    coverage, and is a continuing fear in MA. Many
    states have worse ESI coverage that MA.
  • Section 125 plans, and fair and reasonable
    standards

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10
An Individual Mandate to expand coverage
  • MA has the first individual mandate
  • No political backlash yet-shared responsibility
    is accepted regionally
  • Support is still strong (at 69 support, up from
    60)
  • Signed up 70 of uninsured in less than 3 years
  • Tax penalties on individual growing gradually
    (219/917)
  • Shared responsibility is something that resonates
  • Mandate is on individual adults
  • Problem of family coverage S-CHIP was made free
    in MA if adults signed up. Many cant afford
    family coverage through ESI and cant get into
    CommCare. Unresolved
  • ERISA means the mandate is on individuals, not
    businesses-if a plan does not meet MCC,
    individual is on the hook for penalty, not
    employer

11
How did we get young workers insured?
  • Biggest group of uninsured are young males-the
    invincibles-some because MA regulated market
    meant younger workers paid a lot, and had left
    the market.
  • In MA, 60 uninsured were young males
  • Even with mandate, they are the group that is
    most resistant to buying coverage. When young
    adults opt-out, this raises the costs of those
    who do buy
  • Tension between creating lower cost options for
    young adults, and bringing them into higher risk
    pools vs. raising the cost of broader coverage
    for young adults
  • Young-Adult-Plans (like student coverage), and
    families may now cover children until 26.

12
MA Insurance market reforms started before
Chapter 58
  • Guarantee issue no medical underwriting rate
    bands limited to 21.
  • More expensive for young adults less expensive
    for older adults.
  • 60 of uninsured were young males.
  • Chapter 58 merged non-group and small group
    markets, which lead to decrease in non-group
    costs by 25-30, with improved benefits

13
Whats happened in the non-group market?
  • Pre-reform plan choice for 37-year-old
  • Monthly premium of 335
  • No Rx coverage
  • 5,000 deductible
  • Post-reform plan choice for 37-year-old
  • Monthly premium of 175
  • Rx coverage
  • 2,000 deductible, with office visits and ER
    coverage prior to the deductible

14
Universal Coverage requires guaranteed issue and
no medical underwriting
  • Only 5 states have guaranteed issue
  • MA uses age and gender rating bands substitute
    for medical underwriting (paying more if you are
    sick) modified community rating
  • In CA, individual mandate was demand of insurers
    if they were to play ball
  • AHIP has said they would agree to guarantee issue
    if combined with individual mandate
  • I.M. gets younger (healthier) people into market
    and risk pool

15
MA set a high bar for what minimum coverage must
be
  • Need to define what minimum coverage is
  • Think of MCC as a minimum wage for health
    benefits
  • MA Connector Board defined it (MCC)-not
    politicians!
  • ERISA is an obstacle to raising quality of
    coverage-threat of an ERISA challenge if we
    mandate too high a level of coverage individuals
    will be penalized if not MCC compliant, not
    businesses
  • Real struggle with Taft-Hartley's
  • Without a definition, many skinny products
    could have entered our market without solving
    coverage needs.
  • MA requires drug coverage, deductibles of no more
    than 2,000 for individual/4,000 for family at
    least 3 preventative visits pre-deductible no
    annual or per-episode limit a broad range of
    medical services
  • MCC does not cover larger self-insured and
    Taft-Hartley plans
  • Most insurance regulation is set state-by-state
    and could be an obstacle to reform from the
    national level. Progressive state leaders are
    looking for flexibility in reform.

16
Affordability schedule
  • Built around subsidized plans
  • Only up to 300 FPL
  • Does not consider OOP costs only premiums
  • Were unable to resolve OOP because progressives
    wanted it as of income (10), but how do you
    calculate OOP (at sickest level), and does the
    shoebox approach really work?
  • Big hole for those 300-500 FPL. Unaffordable,
    but no access to plans

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18
Medicaid and Medicare payments need to be
restructured
  • MA had maximized Federal Medicaid dollars, and
    negotiated a 1115 waiver that allowed reform
  • Promise of 90M/90M/90M in higher Medicaid rates
    for providers. Has been cut back because of
    economic downturn. Big problem. DSH hit
    hardest.
  • Will every state be allowed this flexibility, and
    access to Medicaid dollars. Where will the
    additional funding come from?
  • Even with expanded federal matching funds, it
    will require states to increase their expense on
    health care. How will national reform make that
    possible?

19
MA reform took money from free care and provider
DSH payments, and used it to buy insurance for
individuals
  • Through 1115 waiver, MA took safety net dollars
    to pay for insurance coverage for the poor.
  • Built in a 3 year transition for MMCOs-sole
    contractors
  • Has been a rough transition for Safety Net
    providers
  • Patients have choice-some leaving safety net
    facilities
  • Isolates undocumented immigrants in old free
    care/emergency system
  • If the poor are insured, how do we get our safety
    net hospitals to compete in the market to capture
    patients they use to serve?

20
Safety Net Care Pool
Before 2nd Waiver Extension
Now
State 287m Fed 287m
Chapter 58
State 385m (via IGT) Fed 385m
21
Pre-Reform Funding Flow
Federal Govt.
Providers DSH hospitals BMC CHA
Medicaid 385 M
via IGT
Patients
UCP
Other Providers
22
Post-Reform Funding Flow
Fed
MMCOs
UCP shrinks
Insured Patients
Providers All hospitals
23
Free Care versus Comm Care Patients - Patient
volume continues to change but will stabilize as
the remaining Comm Care eligible patients
enroll(BWH and MGH Only)
Note Effective 10/1/07, those eligible for
Commonwealth Care could no longer choose to
remain on Free Care. These patients will
eventually become self pay patients unless they
enrolled in Commonwealth Care. Data Source SDSM
24
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27
Which comes first, the chicken (cost and quality)
or the egg (access)?
  • Obama wants CQ first, before considering a
    mandate
  • MA decided to do access first, and is now
    attacking cost and quality
  • MA leaders think in hindsight their approach
    worked-people bought into the system, and are
    more willing to tackle cost economic downturn
    has increased this pressure. New Payment Reform
    Commission considering global payments

28
Primary Care workforce development
  • MA moved 442,000 new patients into a system over
    two years. The lack of primary care clinicians
    is a huge problem. National needs will be
    staggering.
  • Need for rate changes that pay better for primary
    care
  • Need for larger workforce, broader set of titles
    (PA, NP, LPNs, what else?)
  • Need for training and workforce development
  • Where will primary care be provided? Clinics,
    community health centers? Where will new
    workforce be employed?

29
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30
MA reform built around the Connector
  • MA Connector was responsible for
  • Making many policy decisions that politicians
    could not resolve (affordability, what should
    health insurance cover, etc.)
  • Operated by consensus
  • In charge of implementation and creating
    subsidized plans
  • Not clear that small business offerings are a
    viable role for Connector
  • Will that work nationally?
  • National Connector for federal policy
  • Local/regional Connectors to interpret and
    implement federal ideas
  • Laws, regulations, and market are local and
    different.
  • The politics of surviving backlash means a local
    face and stakeholders is important.

31
MA was unable to cover undocumented immigrants
through reform
  • MA has historically treated undocumented
    immigrants primarily through a free care pool.
  • As others are pulled out of the pool and insured,
    the pool has become a ghetto for many
    immigrants. Have access to emergency care only
    and a bit of preventative care.
  • Will need to have a federal change to allow
    Medicaid/CMS money to be used to cover everyone.

32
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33
Lessons/Issues
  • Let Connector make many key policy decisions (not
    politicians)-affordability, minimum plans
  • Implementation is as critical as the bill.
  • MA put off issues of cost and made access first
    recent cost bill
  • Health delivery system not reformed-just
    starting less complaints about Primary Care
    access than expected
  • Built around Medicaid system-Kingsdale
    disagrees-interdependency
  • CommCare is designed like MassHealth program-a
    private program build on 4 MMCOs-no public
    program
  • Consensus decision-making-more power to the left
  • How cover families, not individuals S-CHIP free
  • Affordability on premiums only-unresolved debate.
  • Those between 300-500 FPL not required to buy,
    but no coverage
  • Those working but cant afford coverage left
    out-potential cost for those already buying
    coverage.
  • Problems getting around ERISA on state level for
    funding and benefit levels
  • States will have to spend more to get Federal
  • What will happen to Safety Net providers?
  • List billing for small groups
  • How will the undocumented get covered?

34
Problems for DSH hospitals
  • CMS under Bush demanded that special DSH
    payments to big DSH systems be converted to
    health insurance. Pools of money for
    uncompensated care is now for insurance cards
  • Special payments to MMCOs was declining, and will
    be eliminated by July 2009
  • In economic downturn, MA Governor cut other
    special payments for high public providers, and
    cut Medicaid rates to DSH hospitals by 22
  • Now Gov is asking the question What is the role
    of the safety net hospitals? Cant patients just
    go to Mass General now?

35
Baucus/House plan like MA
  • Individual mandate/shared responsibility
  • Builds around ESI
  • Guarantee issue and no medical underwriting
  • Affordable/subsidies to 400
  • Public programs
  • An Exchange/Connector/Board to set policy
  • Minimum coverage defined nationally

36
  • Resources
  • www.mahealthconnector.org
  • www.bcbsfoundationma.org
  • www.roadmaptocoverage.org
  • www.massmedicaid.org
  • www.mass.gov/dhcfp
  • www.hcfama.org
  • www.mass.gov/myhealthcareoptions
  • Celia.Wcislo_at_1199.org
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