Title: Single-Payer System: Is the Crystal Ball Any Clearer?
1Single-Payer SystemIs the Crystal Ball Any
Clearer?
- March 14, 2006
- Rick Mayes, Ph.D.
- Assistant Professor of Public Policy
2Lifes Unavoidable Tradeoffs
- Individuals, families, organizations, companies,
states, nations constantly strike balances
between - Security and Freedom
- Egalitarianism and Individualism
- Every health care system has its strengths
weaknesses - (problems).
3Lifes Unavoidable Tradeoffs
4Lifes Unavoidable Tradeoffs
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8Health Care Spending as of GDP, 2002(in
purchasing power parity - U.S.)
Source OECD Data 2003
9Why is the U.S. so Different from Other
Countries?
10Why is the U.S. so Different from Other
Countries? Its primarily because of higher
PRICES (less efficiency).
11The Uninsured, 15.6 of the U.S. Population
(Census, 2005)
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13Consequences Care Postponed Not Received
14Extreme Consequences Bankruptcy Earlier Death
- 50 of uninsured patients have debts from
previous medical care a 1/3rd are being pursued
by collection agencies - Uninsured women with breast cancer are twice as
likely to die as women with breast cancer who
have health insurance. - (Kaiser Commission, 2002)
- Men without health insurance are nearly 50 more
likely to be diagnosed with colon cancer at a
later, more dangerous stage than men with
insurance. - (Kaiser Commission, 2002)
- Upwards of 750,000 families are bankrupted by
medical debt each year, even though 80 of them
have some form of health insurance single
largest cause of bankruptcy (Health Affairs,
2005).
15Arnold and Sharen Dorsett with their children,
Dakota, Zachery and Jessica, back. Though they
had insurance, health-care costs for Zachery led
the Dorsetts to file for bankruptcy this year.
Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times
16Why no Universal Coverage in the U.S.?
- Popular explanations
- -- it would be too expensive
- -- American welfare policy is too stingy
- -- traditional opposition by medical providers,
- particularly physicians (the AMA)
17Americas Accidental Health Care System
- Critical Junctures Tipping Points
- ?
- Increasing Returns
- ?
- Path Dependency
18Critical Junctures Tipping Points
- rare, often unpredictable, and hugely
consequential for what comes after - (e.g., QWERTY keyboard, VHS/Betamax, health
epidemics) - personal examples
- (e.g., college major)
19Increasing Returns
- Each subsequent step after a critical juncture
reinforces the initial event/decision due in part
to large set-up or fixed costs - (e.g., frequent flier-programs, entitlement
programs Medicare/Social Security) - Momentum builds due to decreasing marginal costs
and increasing benefits for continuing down the
existing path. - At the same time, increasing penalties and costs
for exiting from the current path.
20Path Dependency
- The benefits of sticking with a particular
program or decision ultimately increase to the
point that they virtually outweigh any dramatic
departure. - senior professors Vietnam Iraq
21Americas Accidental Health Care System
- Truman and NLRB ruling in 1948
- regarding collective bargaining
- famous GM-UAW 1948 contract
22Americas Accidental Health Care System
23One Problem with Employer-Provided Health
Insurance
- It creates gaps! . . . for the unemployed and
the elderly (classic market failures). - Answer build on the existing public social
insurance program, Social Security - Medicare Medicaid, 1965
- Still took
- (1.) the assassination of a President (JFK)
- (2.) a landslide Democratic victory in 64
(thanks to Goldwater), and - (3.) a financial deal with the AMA and the AHA
to pass Medicare.
24One Problem With Medicare Cost ()
25Americas Accidental Health Care System
26Path Dependency and Americas Accidental
Health Care System
- Clintons health reform effort in 1993-94 showed
just how entrenched our patchwork system of
health care is. - Only 2 options available to Clinton
- large income tax increase or employer mandate
- RESULT health care in the U.S. is rationed ad
hoc, - person by person, child by child . . .
-
27The Oregon Health Plan Deliberative Rationing
- 1987 Death of 7-year old Coby Howard from
leukemia - 1989 Dr. John Kitzhaber, ER physician and
President - of the Oregon Senate advocated changing
Medicaid - 1991 Prioritized List of diagnoses
treatments - 1994 Oregon Health Plan begins operation, adds
100,000 - 2003 sliding-scale premiums increased and new
co-pays
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29Two Major Developments Hindered Oregons Plan
- (1.) 2001 recession
- (2.) crystal-meth epidemic
30State of U.S. Health Care System
- Since 2000 . . .
- health insurance premiums have increased 73
- (versus 14 in general inflation and avg. wage
growth) - - avg. cost of single coverage (4,000
annually in 2005) - - avg. cost of family coverage (11,000 annually
in 2005) - The percent of companies offering health
insurance to their workers has fallen from 69 in
2000 to 60 in 2005 - (5.5 million working Americans have lost their
coverage since 2000)
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32Segmentation of U.S. Health Care Increasing
CONCIERGE MEDICINE
Patients like Ilse Kaplan, left, receive more
personal attention from Dr. Bernard Kaminetsky in
exchange for an annual fee of about 1,650.
33Consumer-Directed Health Care Health Savings
Accounts
34The Moral Hazard Argument Against Expanding
Health Insurance Coverage
- Term used to describe the paradoxical fact that
insurance can change behavior of the person
insured. - example employer-provided donut insurance or
auto insurance - avg. annual amount spent on medical care (by
uninsured person) 934 - avg. annual amount spent on medical care (by
insured person) 2,347 - Conclusion I co-pays, deductibles, utilization
reviews make patients use health care more
efficiently (frugally, wisely, sparingly, etc.) - Conclusion II instead of expanding group health
insurance, reduce it
35The Moral Hazard Argument Against Expanding
Health Insurance Coverage
- Fallacy I Moral-hazard argument only makes sense
if we consume health care in the same way we
consume donuts, car repairs or consumer goods. - Fallacy II Having to pay for your own care does
not automatically make ALL of your health care
consumption more efficient. How could it? - example wifes appt. with dermatologist
- Reality cost-sharing is a very BLUNT instrument
- example RAND Corporations Health Insurance
Experiment (1971-86) - BOTTOM-LINE health insurance is moving in the
actuarial direction and away from the social
insurance model w/enormous consequences to come
36Alternative Model?