Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Posts Tagged ‘Washington State’

A “robust” public option means no public option

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009


I watched this interesting interview on Countdown tonight with Markos Moulitsas. What I almost said aloud as I watched this was “a ‘robust’ public option means no public option for Washington state.” That is just a fact of the market in Washington state that doesn’t exist in the same way in other parts of the United States.




Progressives are all over the idea of not just a public option, but a “robust” public option. That term, “robust,” is actually code – not for a strong or resilient public option – but rather a plan that has rates pegged to Medicare.

I’ve explained this before, but the CEO of the Everett Clinic, a national leader in getting positive outcomes for Medicare patients at a low cost, makes the point just as well. We posted his letter to the Washington delegation earlier. Here’s the crux.

As you know, Medicare pays less in Washington than it pays in other states. Providers in our state are penalized because we deliver care more efficiently…

Under the original Medicare fee-for-service model, we lose $464 per patient each year. This year we are projecting a loss of approximately $11.7 million treating Medicare patients.

Under the current system, the commercial insurers in our state subsidize Medicare payments by up to 40 percent. This subsidy is essential for us continue to care for our Medicare patients. If in addition payments for private pay patients are lowered to the level currently paid for Medicare patients in Washington, the entire healthcare financing system in our state will be permanently damaged.

In Washington state, our Medicare reimbursement rates are so low compared to the rest of the country, providers are cutting Medicare patients off of their patient panels. They are refusing to take Medicare as insurance.

At the same time, commercial rates from plans like Premera and Regence, which pay doctors rates negotiated in the marketplace, are much higher than Medicare. What occurs, therefore, is one of the many cost shifts in health care: the payments to doctors from commercial plans are high enough that they subsidize the care provided to Medicare patients.

Take away commercial plans and their reimbursements, and you take away the subsidy to doctors which allows them to keep their doors open to Medicare patients.

So, if a new public option is created in Washington state, it is very unlikely physicians will contract with it to see patients covered by the plan – that is if the public option rates are pegged to Medicare rates in what is called the “robust” option.

It is altogether even possible that the Washington State Hospital Association and Washington State Medical Association would push to “opt out” of such a plan (assuming that is an option for states in the bills released this week). I doubt the Legislature would go for that, but that potential activism would demonstrate the antipathy of providers to a “robust” option.

All that said, a public option that is allowed to negotiate rates with doctors based upon the market, and which sets patient premiums based upon the costs of providing the plan (without a subsidy from the general fund to the plan, like Medicare gets), would be a huge benefit to Washington state citizens and a fundamental asset to market reforms here. But, they better get the details right or it will be all for not.

Updated: Typo fixed.




HHS Secretary Sebelius releases new numbers for uninsured in Washington State

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009


Today, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released new numbers concerning the number of uninsured people in Washington State. The numbers come from analysis of last week’s census bureau numbers regarding the uninsured.

“These numbers only serve to further confirm a reality that far too many American families live with every day,” said Secretary Sebelius. “Our health care system has reached a breaking point. The status quo is unsustainable, and continuing to delay reform is not an option.”

Here are the newly released numbers:

• The status quo is not an option. The number of uninsured in Washington has increased from 763,000 in 2001 to 808,000 in 2008. The percent of non-elderly adults without insurance increased from 16.0% to 16.4%. And this number only considers people who are uninsured for an entire year – it does not include people in Washington who have more recently lost coverage through the recession, or who had shorter gaps in their coverage.

• Private coverage is eroding under the status quo. The percentage of people with employer-based coverage decreased from 74.3% of the population in 2001 to 69.1% in 2008.

• More workers are being left without protection from health care costs. Too many workers in Washington do not have health coverage, at 538,000 in 2008. And the proportion of workers from Washington without insurance has increased, from 15.3% in 2001 to 15.9% in 2008.

• The problem of the uninsured is a problem that crosses income brackets. The new Census numbers also drive home the fact that everyone in Washington is vulnerable to losing health insurance. An additional 28,000 people from high-income households are now uninsured.




State Senator Karen Keiser responds to President Obama’s healthcare address

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

State Senator Karen Keiser
State Senator Karen Keiser, chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, hosted a series of four healthcare town halls last month with Representative Eileen Cody. You can read about those here and here.

This afternoon Senator Keiser responded to last night’s healthcare address by President Barack Obama and the effects of healthcare reform on Washington State.

The health reform goals outlined in the President’s speech, ─slowing health care costs, covering the insured and providing families with more security and stability─ are goals we have worked for years to achieve at the state level. Those are Washington state values. It’s clear we have a strong federal partner to help us solve this critical issue.

The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) supports the public health insurance option, while over 850 individual states legislators from all fifty states with the Progressive States Network have called for any federal reform bill to include a public health insurance option, strong affordability protections, and shared employer responsibility for health care costs.

More than 876,000 Washingtonians have no coverage and many others are underinsured. They are just one illness or accident away from financial ruin. We need reform now, not yelling and screaming. Going forward, we need to tone down the rhetoric and focus on the issue at hand ─fixing our broken health care system.

States will be responsible for implementing any plan Congress passes and the President signs, so we will have a lot of work to do during the 2010-2011 sessions.

We’ve been working on health reform for years in our state with good success. Having the backing and support of the federal government will help us reduce waste, fraud and abuse in the industry and provide our citizens with the coverage they need and deserve.

I was glad to see bogus claims such as death panels debunked. The President set a new tone with the speech. As chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, I hope that spirit of cooperation will be evident at upcoming health reform hearings in both chambers of the state legislature.




The Washington Health Partnership plan

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009


The Washington State Legislature passed the Washington Health Partnership plan (WHPP) on April 21st. On May 18th, the WHPP was partially vetoed, but signed into law, by Governor Chris Gregoire.

The WHPP establishes a working group tasked with reaching goals set forth by the Blue Ribbon Commission on Health Care Costs and Access. Click here to read the final report published in January of 2007.

This includes extending coverage to individuals below 200 percent of the federal poverty level in an Apple Health program for adults.

The Apple Health program for kids has at its core a goal of ensuring health coverage for all children by 2010. It streamlines applications for childrens health coverage so parents are aware of their child’s eligibility, including the 75,000 children in Washington that are currently without coverage.

The bill digest describes the goals of the bill as follows:

“Creates the Washington health partnership plan to attain
the following goals:

(1) By 2012, every resident of this state
shall have access to affordable, comprehensive health care
services;
(2) Services shall be provided through the private health
care sector;
(3) The health reform plan shall maintain and improve
choice of health care providers and high quality health care
services in this state; and
(4) The health reform plan shall include cost-containment
strategies that retain and assure affordable coverage for all
Washingtonians.

Requires the department of social and health services to
submit a request to the federal department of health and human
services to expand and revise the medical assistance program
as codified in Title XIX of the federal social security act.”


All of the substantive portions of the bill were passed. Only a section requiring quarterly meetings of an advisory board was vetoed by Governor Gregoire.

The bill went into effect on July 26, 2009.

Read the WHPP here.