Pages

Friday, March 29, 2013

Health Care Reform Articles - March 29, 2013


Does Medicaid expansion really penalize Maine taxpayers?

Posted March 28, 2013, at 1:51 p.m.
The LePage administration’s letter to the federal government seeking ways to bring new Medicaid funding to Maine is encouraging. It has stimulated new discussions about the Affordable Care Act, the role Medicaid plays in Maine and how federal funds support the program.
In the current debate, we hear that Maine has seen a reduction in federal reimbursement. Medicaid, called MaineCare here, is a shared responsibility. Today the federal government provides about $62 for every $38 the state spends on Medicaid services. Each year a formula, based on per capita income, is calculated to determine how much federal money a state will receive.
Maine is treated just like all the other states and, like about half of them, has seen its federal funding decrease. Conversely, some years our federal rate increases. The formula is cyclical, reflecting income changes in the states. The funding formula should be updated, but only Congress can do that.
Congress enacted a one-time, temporary Medicaid increase to help states through the recession. Maine and all states benefited from that temporary payment bump that began October 2008, knowing it expired in June 2011.
The Affordable Care Act now provides states with 100 percent federal funding for three years and 90 percent thereafter if they cover low-income adults who were previously ineligible for Medicaid. Some argue that the act penalizes states such as Maine: Because adults were already covered here, Maine cannot qualify for this new federal funding.
But in 2009, during the Affordable Care Act debate, states that were “early expanders” of Medicaid raised similar concerns. Working together, and with congressional and White House staff, we secured a special provision in the law. Maine will receive more federal funding (81 percent versus the current 62 percent) to cover childless adults in 2014. That amount increases each year until it reaches 90 percent, just like other states receive in 2020 and beyond.
The federal government will pay fully for those on the waiting list for services. There is another pathway in the law that may even qualify us to receive full funding for adults already on the program.
As early expanders, we knew we’d see savings through the Affordable Care Act. Some of those now served by Medicaid could instead became eligible for private insurance premium tax credits offered through the new insurance exchanges and paid for by the federal government, not the state. The savings to states such as Maine have been cited by liberal and conservative sources alike.
In some states, parents will also be funded at 100 percent for three years when the Affordable Care Act is fully in place in 2014. But all states already covered some parents (the median is 66 percent of the federal poverty level), and 18 states, including Maine, had already covered parents above 100 percent of the poverty level. By law, no state will receive higher funding for those already covered. Much of that expansion in Maine, however, was paid by the initiative Dirigo Health, not state general funds.

We are being damned: Americans losing faith in failed health care system

Posted March 28, 2013, at 3:55 p.m.
We who lead in the American health care system — primarily physicians and hospitals — are slowly having our credibility with the public eroded. The main reason for this is our collective failure to credibly lead this country in its journey to a health care system that safely and affordably cares for all Americans.
The latest such blow to our credibility is “Bitter Pill: Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us,” published four weeks ago as the cover story in Time magazine http://healthland.time.com/2013/02/20/bitter-pill-why-medical-bills-are-killing-us/. In a 26,000-word article, Steven Brill challenges the idea that hospitals have any justification for their high prices, and details a litany of hospital pricing markups of routine medical supplies such as alcohol wipes by more than a hundredfold. He tells story after story of patients charged extraordinary prices for care they could not do without by hospitals with strong profit margins and CEOs making multimillion-dollar salaries.
The Time article was just the latest of at least four articles or reports in the past 15 years that have shaken the faith many Americans have had in the people and places that take care of them. The first of these was “Crossing the Quality Chasm” ( iom.edu/Reports/2001/Crossing-the-Quality-Chasm-A-New-Health-System-for-the-21st-Century.aspx ), the Institute of Medicine’s 2001 report on the quality and safety of patient care in American hospitals. It exposed the frequency and pervasiveness of errors in medical care, the likelihood such errors and inadequacies were causing thousands of deaths each year, and laid the responsibility for fixing our deeply flawed safety systems squarely at the feet of its caregivers. In doing so, the report said the high prices we pay for our care do not systematically buy us greater safety.
The second of these was a 2006 report from the Commonwealth Foundation comparing the outcomes and quality of care provided by the world’s most expensive health system (ours) with the care provided in 60 other countries. It shredded the idea that we had the best health care system in the world; in fact, we ranked 35th, and had not improved much when the analysis was done again in 2008 (http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Publications/Fund-Reports/2008/Jul/Why-Not-the-Best—Results-from-the-National-Scorecard-on-U-S—Health-System-Performance—2008.aspx). So the idea we were getting better care than other countries paying a lot less per person for health care has been laid to rest.
The third of these articles was Atul Gawande’s “The Cost Conundrum: What a Texas Town Can Teach Us About Health Care.” (http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/06/01/090601fa_fact_gawande?currentPage=all). In it, he tells the story of two Texas cities that are worlds apart in how patients are cared for, so far apart that Medicare patients in one city cost taxpayers almost twice as much to care for as Medicare patients in the other city, without demonstrably better health as a result. It laid bare the lack of a credible reason for physicians to care for patients so differently.
None of these seminal articles is without flaws, and none tells a complete story. Brill’s article in Time magazine, for example, fails to explain that the bizarre way we price care in hospitals is a direct result of the bizarre way hospitals are paid for that care. It portrays all hospitals as self-serving, failing to describe those hospitals and health systems trying desperately to do right by patients in a payment system that often punishes them for doing that, and working hard to rapidly change their part of this chaotic mess.

Empathy gap in medical students

Stress can harden students’ attitudes toward patients, but schools are trying to change that

No comments:

Post a Comment