Medicare, Cost Shifting and Universal Coverage - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Medicare, Cost Shifting and Universal Coverage

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Title: Medicare, Cost Shifting and Universal Coverage


1
Medicare, Cost Shifting and Universal Coverage
  • MCVs M-3 Workshop Week
  • April 27, 2005
  • Rick Mayes, Ph.D.
  • Assistant Professor of Public Policy

2
Overview
  • This presentation examines
  • Larger trends in the U.S. health care system and
    in Medicare
  • Issues of specific concern to physicians and
    hospitals
  • Cost shifting and the controversy over increasing
    market segmentation

3
Underlying Medical Inflation The Rise and Fall
(and Rise Again?) of Managed Care
Sources Census Bureau, Kaiser Foundation, CMS,
2004.
4
Underlying Medical Inflation Health Insurance
Premiums
  • Since 2001, on average . . .
  • 5 million fewer jobs now provide health insurance
    in the U.S.
  • the avg. cost of health insurance premiums has
    increased 59
  • (versus 10-12 in wages general
    inflation)
  • employee contributions for health insurance have
    grown
  • by 57 for single coverage (total of
    3,695 annually, 2004)
  • by 49 for family coverage (total of 9,950
    annually, 2004)
  • avg. premium for family coverage (14,565
    projected, 2006)
  • - A growing proportion of the overall increase
    in premiums for employers has been shared with
    employees, particularly those in small businesses.

Source Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation/Health
Research and Education Trust Survey of Employer
Health Benefits, Health Affairs Sept./Oct. 2004.
5
Health Insurance Premiums Declining Coverage
6
Health Insurance Premiums Declining Coverage
7
Underlying Medical Inflation Affects Medicare
Population
Source CMS Office of the Actuary, 2004.
8
Total Uninsured 45 million total persons
(Census, 2003)
9
The Uninsured, 15.6 of the U.S. Population
(Census, 2003)
10
Consequences Care Postponed Not Received
11
Extreme Consequences Bankruptcy Earlier Death
  • Upwards of 750,000 families are bankrupted by
    medical debt each year, even though 80 of them
    have some form of health insurance (CAMS, 2003).
  • 46 of uninsured patients have debts from
    previous medical care (CAMS, 2003).
  • 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).

12
Demographic Trends
Source Medicare Board of Trustees, 2003.
13
Actuarial Trends
Source Medicare Board of Trustees, 2003, 2004.
14
(No Transcript)
15
Medicares new 534 billion Rx Drug Benefit
16
Tom Scully, former CMS Administrator
  • I hate this whole G--damn system. Id blow
    it up if I could, but Im stuck with it. If it
    were up to me, Id buy everybody private
    insurance and forget about it. Obviously thats
    what the Republican view is.
  • We ought to do the same thing we do for
    federal employees go out and buy every senior
    citizen a community-rated, structured, regulated
    private insurance plan. Let them buy an Aetna
    product, or Blue Cross products. Thats the
    Republican philosophy.
  • Why should Tom Scully and his staff fix
    prices for every doctor and hospital in America?
    Which is what we do.
  • - Personal interview with Tom Scully,
    Administrator, Ctrs. for Medicare Medicaid
    Services, 2001-2003

17
Liability Insurance Crisis in U.S.
Sources New England Journal of Medicine and AMA,
2003.
18
Issues of Concern for Physicians Growing
Practice Expenses
19
Issues of Concern for Physicians Growing
Practice Expenses
Source CMS, Office of the Actuary, 2004.
20
Cost-Shifting Hydraulic for Medical Providers
B C MarginContribution
130
B
120
Cost Shift
C
A
110
Cost
100
Shortfall
Margin
90
80
70
Payment-to-Cost Ratio
60
Below Cost Payers
Above Cost Payers
50
40
30
20
10
10
80
90
70
60
50
40
30
20
0
100
Percentage of Market Share
21
Cost-Shifting Hydraulic for Medical Providers
  • Perhaps best thought of as a lubricant within a
    massive series of financial feedback loops
    between
  • - government (Medicare, Medicaid)
  • - providers (hospitals, physicians) and
  • - private payers (insurance companies,
  • employers, patients).

22
The History of Medicares Relationship with
Hospitals Maximize Reimbursement First,
Decrease Costs Later
23
Physicians the Role of Cost-Shifting
Source The Lewin Group, The American College of
Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Practice Expense
Study, for the American College of
Emergency Physicians, September 15, 1998.
24
Source American Hospital Associations Annual
Survey of Hospitals (n6,800 hospitals), 2005.
Pearsons correlation coefficients
1984-1997 Medicare and Private ratios r
-.86 1980-2003 Medicare and Private ratios r
-.73 1984-1997 Medicaid and
Private ratios r -.39 1980-2003 Medicaid and
Private ratios r -.56
25
Community Hospitals the Role of Cost-Shifting
Source The Lewin Group analysis of data
contained in AHA TrendWatch Chartbook Trends
Affecting Hospitals and Health Systems, 2001.
26
Source Glenn Melnick, Uninsured Americans,
Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Health of the
Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives,
108th Cong., 2nd Sess. (9 March 2004)
Professor Melnicks testimony from the
Center for Health Financing, Policy and
Management, School of Policy, Planning and
Development, University of Southern
California.Technical Note Data are derived
from the Medicare Prospective Payment Systems
Impact File, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS, 2004), available at
http//www.cms.hhs.gov/providers/hip
ps/ippspufs.asp, last visited October 1, 2004).
27
Source MedPAC (June 2004)
Segmentation of U.S. Health Care System Increasing
28
Source CMS, Office of the Actuary, 2004.
Segmentation of U.S. Health Care System Increasing
29
(No Transcript)
30
  • POLICY implications of the significant rise in
    physician-owned ambulatory surgery centers,
    specialty hospitals, and diagnostic imaging
    centers
  • 1.) prospects for improved quality, lower costs,
    and more professional autonomy
  • - not a new phenomenon (e.g., heart hospitals in
    London 1857, psychiatry clinics, ear
  • and eye hospitals, obstetrics gynecology
    hospitals)
  • - Adam Smith and the advantages of
    specialization (e.g., pins and focused
    factories)
  • 2.) financial impact on community hospitals fair
    or unfair competition?
  • - cherry picking the best-insured private
    patients by, largely, for-profit entities
  • - skimming lower-cost, healthier Medicare
    cases within individual DRGs
  • - cardiac, orthopedic, radiological services
    huge proportion of hospitals net revenues
  • 3.) impact on communities overall access to care
  • - declining volume smaller patient populations
    make charity care harder to provide
  • - vulnerability of emergency services, burn
    units, psychiatric facilities
  • - complicates doctor-hospital relationships
    (e.g. staff privileges, economic credentialing)

31
Present Future Concerns
  • (1) The ultimate cost shift is both prevalent and
    increasing in scope and degree employers passing
    on a larger and larger share of their increased
    health care costs to their employees . . .
  • - higher monthly wage deductions and/or
    increased co-payments,
  • deductibles, out-of-pocket costs (especially
    for employees dependents)
  • (2) Beyond this strategy, more and more employers
    have simply stopped offering health insurance . .
    .
  • - (15 of the U.S. population is uninsured 45
    million individuals or the
  • aggregate population of 24 states, Census
    2003)

32
Conclusion How much should the government pay
medical providers?
  • TOM SCULLY My frustration is that youre
    trying to be a government contractor. Hospitals
    usually get about 50 of their revenues from
    Medicare Medicaid doctors, on average,
    generally come into practice getting roughly 30
    or so from Medicare Medicaid.
  • So if youre a doctor or if youre a hospital,
    fundamentally a big chunk of your business is as
    a government contractor. And your expectation, I
    think, when dealing with the governmentwhether
    youre in the Pentagon or in health careis
    boring consistency, decent operating margins that
    dont flop around. If youre Boeing, you dont
    want to have a 25 margin one year and a negative
    2 the next year, right?
  • - Interview with Tom Scully, Administrator, Ctrs.
    for Medicare Medicaid Services, 2001-2003

33
Exit Questions
  • (1.) What do providers do (or have to do)
  • when each payer only wants to pay the marginal
    cost?
  • (2.) Who is ultimately responsible for the
    common good in a competitive market?
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