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Health Care Reform: An Economic Perspective

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Title: Health Care Reform: An Economic Perspective


1
Health Care ReformAn Economic Perspective
  • Bill Evans
  • Department of Economics and Econometrics

2
Motivation for talk
  • No Federal reform effort since 1994
  • Re-emergence as a political issue
  • Reform packages from nearly all presidential
    candidates
  • States are forcing the issue

3
Kaiser Family FoundationTracking Survey June
2007
  • What two issues you would most like to hear the
    presidential candidates talk about?
  • Iraq 43
  • Health care 21
  • Immigration 18
  • Economy 13
  • Gas price/Energy 12
  • Terrorism/Nat. Sec. 7

4
Outline of talk
  • What problems must reforms address?
  • What have we learned from reform?
  • Outline some current alternatives
  • Examine some likely economic consequences

5
Talk may be premature
  • Uncertain who the Democratic nominee will be
  • one plan will become irrelevant
  • Plan of the presumptive Republican nominee
    somewhat ill-formed at this point

6
What we will not talk about?
  • Single payer

7
  • Many countries have single-payer system
  • Generates low administrative costs but (arguably)
    poorer quality care
  • US companies process 700 billion in HC claims
    each year
  • The US is not about to get rid of a 700 billion
    industry

8
What are the issues?
  • Cost/Expenditures
  • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures)
  • Equity
  • Coverage

9
Expenditures on Medical Care
  • 2 trillion annually
  • 16 GDP
  • 6000/person
  • Twice as much as the median OECD country

10
90 more than Canada
145 more than the UK
11
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12
Average Annual PremiumsCovered Workers, 2006
(KFF)
  • Individual plan
  • 4,242 total
  • Family plan
  • 11,480

13
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14
Are high expenditures a bad thing?
  • A key driver of health care costs is technology
  • MRIs/CT scans, angioplasty, anti-psychotropic
    drugs, hip/knee replacements, neo-natal intensive
    care, treatments for AIDS, statin drugs (Lipitor)
  • All not available 20 years ago. Now, commonplace

15
HIV/AIDS Drugs
  • Early 1990s, 8 quarterly mortality rates for
    patients w/ AIDS
  • 19954, 19961, three new drug introduced to
    fight virus
  • Work by preventing the virus from replicating in
    the host
  • Usage rates increase immediately and aggregate
    mortality falls 70 in 18 months

16
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17
  • AIDS drugs are expensive, 12K/year in some cases
  • AIDS patients are expensive, 20K/year
  • This medical advance by construction increases
    lifetime spending by a considerably amount

18
  • ARVs increase lifespan after diagnosis with AIDS
    by almost 8 years
  • Lifetime cost of treating an AIDS patient
    increases by about 250K
  • This is expensive, but compared to many other
    programs, it is relatively cheap on a
    cost-per-life-year saved amount

19
NICU
  • Specialty wards of hospitals that provide
    constant nursing and continuous cardiopulmonary
    and other support for severely ill infants
  • Developed in late 1950 early 1970s
  • Growth has been rapid
  • NICU beds increased by 150 1980-1995

20
Costs, 2001 CA
  • NICU discharge 50,000
  • Non-NICU, 4,500
  • In CA, 10 of births are for a NICU
  • Therefore, more than half the hospital cost of
    childbirth are attributable to NICUs

21
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22
But. not getting the bang per buck
  • Overhead costs are high (NEJM, 2003)
  • 31 in US
  • lt 2 in Canada
  • Unnecessary care (Dartmouth Atlas)
  • 30 of care has little medical benefit
  • US performs poorly in comparison
  • Higher infant mortality
  • Lower life expectancy

23
4.3 years less than Japan
2.4 years Less than Canada
24
If you want to cut costs, where do you look?
  • Administrative/overhead
  • Unnecessary procedures
  • Chronic conditions
  • 20 of people responsible for 80 spending

25
What are the issues?
  • Cost/Expenditures
  • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures)
  • Equity
  • Coverage

26
Government Insurance
  • Federal government largest health insurance
    provider
  • Medicaid and Medicare
  • 95 million covered in 2006
  • 540 billion
  • 21 percent of the federal budget

27
Medicare
  • 42.4 million recipients in 2006
  • Costs in 2006
  • 342 billion
  • 14 of Federal expenditures
  • Financing
  • Part A financed by payroll tax (2.9)
  • Part B/D financed by premiums (25) and general
    revenues (75)

28
Future problems
  • Costs of program are expected to escalate between
    now and 2030
  • At the same time, fewer workers to tax
  • Medicare Trustees predict
  • Costs gt revenues by 2011
  • Trust fund exhausted by 2019

29
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32
What are the issues?
  • Cost/Expenditures
  • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures)
  • Equity
  • Coverage

33
Tax System Equity
  • EPHI health insurance is a tax-free fringe
    benefit
  • Greatly reduces the cost to consumers of
    purchasing insurance
  • Has encouraged the growth of EPHI
  • Now, most people w/ private insurance get is
    through their employers

34
Tax Benefit of EPHI
  • A family w/ 70,000 in income
  • 36.4 marginal tax rate
  • 25 federal
  • 3.4 state (Indiana)
  • 8 Social Security and Medicare
  • Want to purchase 12,000 policy in AFTER TAX
    DOLLARS

35
Without tax advantage
  • Receive 18,897 in income
  • Pay 36.4 or 6,897 in taxes
  • 12,000 left over for health insurance
  • Net benefit of tax deduction is 6,897

36
Inequalities
  • Tax break only available to people who receive
    insurance from their firm
  • Higher income families have higher tax rates so
    the tax benefit to them is greater
  • Costs over 210 billion/year

37
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38
What are the issues?
  • Cost/Expenditures
  • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures)
  • Equity
  • Coverage

39
Coverage
  • Uninsurance is a persistent problem in US
  • Dimensions of the problem
  • 47 million people
  • 16 of population
  • 9 million children
  • Uninsurance rates have increased steadily over
    time

40
Who are the uninsured?
  • Race
  • White 10.8
  • Black 20.5
  • Hispanic 34.1
  • Age
  • lt18 11.7
  • 18-24 29.3
  • 25-34 26.9
  • 35-64 16.0
  • 65 1.5
  • Family Income
  • lt25K 24.9
  • 25-50K 21.1
  • 50-75K 14.4
  • gt75K 8.5

41
Time Series
  • Number uninsured
  • 31 million in 1987
  • 47 million in 2006
  • Percent uninsured
  • 12.6 in 1987
  • 15.8 in 2006

42
What have we been doing the past 13 years?
  • Two major efforts aimed at coverage
  • Medicare Part D
  • SCHIP program
  • Movement to managed care
  • BUT.Most of the action has been with states
  • unsuccessful but informative

43
Small Group Reform
  • People without EPHI or small firms must purchase
    insurance in the Small Group Market
  • Small groups tend to have
  • Higher prices
  • Higher administrative fees
  • Prices that are volatile

44
  • Prices are a function of the demographics
  • Concern prices for some groups too high
  • Lower prices for some by community rating
  • Nearly all states have adopted some version of
    small group reform in 1990s

45
What happened?
  • Increased the price for low risk customers
  • Healthy 30 year old pays 180/month in PA
  • 420/month in NJ with community ratings
  • Low risks promptly left the market
  • Which raised prices
  • Policy did everything wrong

46
Lesson
  • Idea was correct
  • Use low risk to subsidize the high risk
  • But you cannot allow the low risk to exit the
    market

47
Massachusetts Reform
48
MA Reform Romney
  • Most ambitious state reform to date
  • Many features but..
  • Most striking component Individual mandate
  • Required by law to carry insurance

49
MA Reform
  • If you require insurance, you need to make it
    affordable
  • State subsidizes purchases for poor
  • Firms must establish Section 125 plans
  • Established the Connector

50
Connector
  • Merge of individual and small group market
  • Market maker in insurance
  • Community rating
  • Requirements on what plans must have

51
Connector
  • Cheapest individual plans cost about 200/month
  • 40-60 lower than average plan
  • Was achieved primarily by higher cost sharing

52
Results from MA
  • It was estimated that 500K were uninsured and
    300K have been added to insurance rolls
  • State underestimated
  • Number uninsured
  • Uninsured eligible for subsidized care
  • Cost of the program are exceeding expectations

53
Exporting MA Plan?
  • Plan is being studied extensively by
  • Other states
  • Presidential candidates
  • MA is very unique so it might not travel
  • Lower uninsurance rate (9)
  • Unique fiscal situation that was used to finance
    the law

54
Other reform plans
  • Obama and Clinton have offered detailed plans
  • Both loosely based on the MA reform
  • Clintons is nearly identical to Edwards
  • Maintain EPHI as basis of system
  • Try to lower costs to those without EPHI so they
    can afford insurance
  • Plans vary in detail but contain many
    similarities

55
Democratic plans
Edwards Obama Clinton
Pay or Play Yes Yes Yes
Connector Type plan Yes Yes Yes
Subsidize/ Tax credits Yes Yes Yes
Individual mandates Yes No Yes
56
Clinton
  • Those without insurance can purchase through same
    insurance members of Congress have
  • Insurance subsidies for low income
  • Reliance on preventive care/disease management to
    reduce costs to make affordable
  • Individual mandates

57
Obama
  • Mandates for children
  • Employer mandates
  • Expansion of SCHIP/Medicaid

58
Cost savings proposals in Obamas Plan
  • Health IT systems
  • 10 billion/year for 5 years
  • Heavy emphasis on disease management
  • Effort to standardize care for chronically ill
  • Performance based rewards (MDs)
  • Rx reform (generics, importation, negot.)

59
Pay or Play
  • Firms must pay 5 wage bill to health insurance
    or pay that as a fine
  • Proposed in 26 states in 2006
  • Language -- firms must pay their fair share
  • Problem ignores the realities of the labor
    market

60
  • Insurance is one component of a compensation
    package
  • Increased costs in one area will be paid for by
    reducing on costs in another (wages)
  • In long run, costs will be borne by workers

61
Will firms pay or play?
  • In March 2007, Private industry
  • Average hourly comp. 27.61
  • Wages/salaries 18.34 (71)
  • Health insurance 1.83 (7.1)
  • Wal-Mart pays 5-7
  • Only 40 Wal-Mart workers receive their care
    through the firm

62
Cost reduction
  • Variety of ways to reduce costs
  • Computer investments (medical records)
  • Preventive services
  • Disease management
  • Best practices
  • Way to self finance plans
  • Problem
  • Returns are years away
  • Preventive/DM not really cost saving

63
Example Cervical Cancer Screening
  • 11,500 cases in 2007, approx. 4000 deaths
  • 4th leading cause of cancer death in women
  • Cheap test available Pap smear 40
  • Expensive to treat (30,000/case)
  • Consider universal testing every three years for
    women 45-64

64
  • 37 million in this group
  • Cancer incidence rate of 16/100,000
  • Approx 6000 new cases per year
  • Suppose test every three years prevents ALL
    cervical cancers for 3 years
  • Costs 1.1 billion
  • Save 540 million
  • Net program cost 560 million

65
Result
  • Universal testing is a good idea
  • saves lives
  • it is a COST EFFECTIVE
  • However, in most cases, mass screening is not
    COST SAVING

66
  • Its a nice thing to think, and it seems like it
    should be true, but I dont know of any evidence
    that preventive care actually saves money,
  • Jon Gruber, MIT Economics professor and architect
    of the Massachusetts Connector plan

67
What is different now?
  • Leaves current system intact, builds out
  • Individual mandates
  • Pay or play
  • Belief we can generate more uniformity in
    practice patterns to save costs

68
What is missing?
  • Little discussion of Medicare
  • Attacks costs by spending more money
  • Little discussion about the need for more cost
    sharing

69
McCain
  • Uninsurance is a problem of cost
  • Attack costs, reduce premiums, increase coverage
    ,
  • Offers variety of proposals designed to drive
    down costs
  • Increase competition in insurance
  • Malpractice reform
  • Increase accountability

70
Highlights
  • Purchase insurance from nationwide pools
  • Obtain insurance through any group, not just
    employers
  • Encourage retail medical outlets
  • Base pay on performance
  • Establish national standards for treatment

71
Tax Credits
  • Eliminate tax deductibility of EPHI
  • Replace with tax credit for people with health
    insurance
  • 2500 for individuals
  • 5000 for families
  • Tax benefit the same for everyone, regardless of
    income

72
Concerns
  • The subsidy rate is not high enough for low
    income people
  • What will happen to employer-provided health
    insurance?

73
Summary
  • Clinton
  • Primarily attacks uninsurance problem
  • Individual mandates
  • Pay or play
  • Imposes lots of (potentially costly) programs
    like preventive medicine
  • Individual mandates make the plan politically
    challenging

74
  • Obama
  • Attacks costs first
  • Most aggressive cost-saving but, benefits are
    years away from being realized
  • Some impact on uninsurance through expansions of
    SCHIP/Medicaid, pay-or-play
  • Benefits to working uninsured will be long in the
    future when/if costs have been reduced

75
  • McCain
  • Riskiest program because it blows up EPHI
  • Replaces with a tax credit
  • Estimates suggest it will have minimal impact on
    uninsurance
  • Questionable impact on costs -- any benefits are
    long in the future
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