Managed Care Economics

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Managed Care Economics

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Passed to allow labor unions to negotiate national health plans with big employers. Preempts state regulation of certain self-insured health plans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managed Care Economics


1
Managed Care Economics
  • Health Care Finance
  • From the Blues to Managed Care

2
What Does Life Expectancy Tell Us?
  • The Last 100 Years
  • 25 Years in 1850
  • 50 Years in 1950
  • About 75 now
  • Lower for Blacks and Native Americans

3
What made the Difference?
  • 25 - 72
  • Sanitation
  • Immunizations
  • Disease Control
  • All Public Health
  • 72-75
  • Antibiotics
  • Chronic Disease Treatment

4
Quality of Life
  • When Social Security was started, less than 5 of
    the population lived to 65
  • Now a significant number of people live into
    their 80s
  • Most of them are fairly healthy and active
  • Many chronic diseases and conditions have been
    controlled
  • Allergies
  • Diabetes

5
The Downside - Health Care Costs Too Much
  • Many People Cannot Afford It
  • Diverts Dollars From Other Things
  • Hurts Global Competitiveness
  • Cars in Canada
  • Low Cost Labor

6
Costs More Than Other Countries
  • Health As of GNP Has More than Doubled in 50
    Years
  • It is 20-50 Higher Than Europe
  • Their Health Statistics Are Just As Good
  • Do They Know Something We Don't?

7
U.S. Has A Lower Life Expectancy than Most Other
Industrialized Countries
  • Taken as a major criticism of the US system
  • Is life expectancy really the right measure?

8
Life Expectancy Is Not Health
  • Bias
  • Weighted Toward the Young
  • One Baby Is Worth Several Grannies
  • Only Life Counts
  • Discounts Quality of Life
  • Nursing Home Is As Good As the Ski Slopes
  • Masks Aging Population
  • Masks Improved Health
  • A Good Measure for Developing Countries

9
What Complicates Health in the US?
  • We Have 3rd World Public Health
  • Ineffective Prenatal Care
  • Poor Immunization Practices
  • Limited Access to preventive and routine care
  • Teen Pregnancy
  • Prematurity
  • Poor Parenting
  • Developed World Leader in AIDS

10
Non-medical Issues
  • The Problem of the Poor
  • Poor Education
  • Poor Health Habits
  • Cannot Afford Prevention
  • Geography
  • Too Many Isolated Areas
  • Expensive to Deliver Care

11
How has the Health Care Umbrella been Expanded?
  • Sin to Sickness
  • Alcoholism
  • Drug Abuse
  • Mental Health Services
  • Nursing Homes
  • Vanity Surgery
  • Should Compare Total Social Welfare Budget with
    Europe

12
The Core Problem
  • Public Health Does Not Work Well but Medicine
    Does, for people who can get it
  • Old People Are Healthier
  • Middle-aged (Middle-Class) People Do Well
  • Drugs and Devices Matter

13
Second Order Demographics
  • More Old People
  • More Care Per Person
  • Costs Have to Go up
  • Much cheaper in a country where few people live
    to be 65

14
Paying for Medical Care
  • Pre-WW II
  • Mostly Private Pay
  • Some Employer Provided - Kaiser
  • WW II
  • Price Controls
  • Post WW II
  • Health Insurance As Benefit
  • Private Insurance
  • The Blues
  • Medicare/Medicaid

15
Blue Cross - Blue Shield
  • Developed by Docs and Hospitals
  • Sold to Teachers
  • Assure Access
  • Assure Payment
  • Reimbursement Policy
  • Pay Whatever Was Charged
  • Subsidize the Rural Areas
  • Subsidized Over-bedding and Over Treatment

16
Federal Programs
17
Social Security Income and Disability
  • 1930s
  • Lifted the elderly out of poverty
  • Provided disability insurance for workers
  • The disability is quite a big and valuable
    program and pays for a lot of medical care

18
Hill-Burton
  • Post-WWII
  • Funded construction of community hospitals
  • Had community service requirements, but those
    have all expired
  • Created the US emphasis on hospital based care
  • Spent from the 1970s to the 1990s reducing
    hospital beds to control costs
  • Excess beds or Surge Capacity?

19
The Great Society
  • Medicare
  • Old People
  • Certain disabled people
  • Medicaid
  • Poor People
  • Nursing Homes
  • About 40 of medical dollars
  • Fought by the AMA
  • Made Docs Rich

20
No Good Old Days for Patients
  • Gaming the System under Fee For Service
  • Right to Die As Example
  • Cannot Just Open the Checkbook
  • Greed Is Not Good in Medical Care
  • Fee for Service Drives Unnecessary Care
  • Hospitals Have to Care More About Money Than
    Patients
  • Rich Docs Are Not Always Better Docs

21
Federal Interventions
  • Feds Pay About 40 of Health Care
  • Other Plans Follow the Feds
  • Usual and Customary Charges for Docs
  • Based on the Community
  • Adjusted for the Docs Previous Charges
  • Complex

22
Hospital Costs
  • Big Dollars Are in the Hospital Charges
  • Docs only get 20-25 of the health care budget
  • Hospitals get a lot of the rest
  • Drugs are an increasing share
  • Fee for Service Drove Unnecessary Care
  • Open-end Reimbursement drove High Prices
  • Hospitals did not even know costs

23
Diagnosis Related Groups - DRGs - 1983
  • Watershed in Health Care Reimbursement
  • Prospective Payment (Capitation)
  • Based on Admitting Diagnosis
  • Fixed Payment
  • Some Adjustments
  • Encouraged health insurers to also manage
    physician care

24
Making Money Under DRGs
  • Fewer Tests and Procedures
  • Complete Reversal of Prior Reimbursement
  • No Bump for ICU
  • Reduce Length of Stay
  • Dropped About 20 at Once, continued to drop
  • Ideal Is Out the Door, Dead or Alive
  • Patients Discharged Much Sicker
  • Which Was Right, Then or Now?

25
Federal Laws Enabling Managed Care for Docs
  • Federal HMO Act in the 1970s
  • Preempted State Laws Banning Prepaid Care
  • ERISA
  • Passed to allow labor unions to negotiate
    national health plans with big employers
  • Preempts state regulation of certain self-insured
    health plans
  • Gave self-insured plans an edge and drove most
    employers to them

26
Managed Care Organizations - MCOs
  • Insurance Plans That Control Patient Care
  • Includes the Old Alphabet Soup
  • HMOs
  • PPOs
  • IPAs

27
Two Major Variables
  • Employer or Contractor
  • Do the docs work for the plan or a captive group?
  • Do the docs contract with many plans, treating
    patients based on different plan benefits?
  • Open or Closed
  • Do the docs treat only patients from a single
    plan or a mix of plans?
  • Why do these matter?
  • Leverage on the doc's decisions

28
Direct Controls on Costs
  • Pay Less for Services
  • Use Market Power to Bargain
  • Control Access Points
  • Limit Hospital Stays
  • Limit Tests, Procedures, and Referrals
  • Direct Control of Access
  • Pre-approval
  • Tell the Docs What to Do
  • Most Honest

29
Indirect Controls
  • Capitation
  • CRF--Consultation and Referral Funds
  • Withhold and Incentive Pools
  • Stop-loss and Reinsurance
  • Total Capitation
  • Economic Credentialing
  • Dumb Down Services
  • Free Ride on Other Plans or the Government

30
Deferring Care
  • Stop-gap Care
  • Keep You Out of the Hospital
  • Keep You Away From Specialists
  • Managing Crises, Not Solving Problems
  • Only works in the short term, but plans only
    think in the short term
  • Unsustainable Policies - Plans Are Going Broke

31
How Patients Get Hurt - Easy Answers
  • Denied Care - the Usual Lawsuit
  • Incompetent Care by Bad Doc
  • Incompetent Care by a Non-doc
  • Putting Patients in Dangerous Facilities
  • Not Using Proper Drugs
  • Simple Negligence

32
Good Docs Do Bad Things
  • Too Little Time to See the Patients
  • Inadequate Labs and X-ray Available
  • Locked Into Problematic Specialists
  • Patients Cannot Get in to See You
  • Lose Control in the Hospital

33
Why Fears of Malpractice do not Improve Care
  • Too Far Away in Time
  • Too Uncertain
  • Fight for Quality - Die Today
  • Lose Your Job
  • Get Hit With Restrictive Covenants
  • Get Blackballed by Other Plans
  • Get Reported to the BOME for Alleged Bad Care
  • ERISA Preemption

34
Kill the Messenger Phase - 1990s
  • Plans Will Not Tolerate Dissent
  • Key Issues
  • Avoid Notice of Problems
  • Keep Other Staff in Line
  • Keep Patients in the Dark
  • Keep Regulators Ignorant
  • Gag Rules
  • Fireem
  • Greshams Law

35
Where Does ERISA Preemption Come In?
  • Series of Case in the 1980s and 1990s
  • Suits against Plans (not docs) claiming
    malpractice through plan decisions or incentives
  • Courts ruled that you could sue the individual
    doc for malpractice
  • Could not sue plans for malpractice injuries
    because ERISA preempted state claims against
    plans
  • Plans that employed physicians could be
    vicariously liable

36
Plan Medical Directors
  • Plan Medical Directors wore the plan hat and also
    made medical care decisions
  • Most plans provided medically necessary care
  • Exclusions for quack care
  • Exclusions for experimental care
  • Deciding if care is medically necessary is a
    medical decision
  • Some states required these decisions to be made
    by docs licensed in the state, not by accountants
    in New Jersey or India

37
Pegram
  • Pegram is a case about a doc wearing both hats
  • She is a plan owner as well as a treating
    physician
  • The court is trying to decide if the plan should
    be liable for her decisions or whether ERISA
    preemption should apply.
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