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Financing of health care

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Financing of health care Where is it going? John P. Garven, CLU, RHU President, Benico, Ltd. President, Illinois State Association of Health Underwriters – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financing of health care


1
Financing of health care Where is it going?
  • John P. Garven, CLU, RHU
  • President, Benico, Ltd.
  • President, Illinois State Association of Health
    Underwriters
  • Policy Advisor, The Heartland Institute
  • (847-669-4800, ext. 202 john.garven_at_benico.com)
  • August 19, 2008 Northern Illinois Association
    of Health Underwriters

2
Agenda
  • How did we get here?
  • Key concepts
  • Key facts
  • International comparisons
  • The case for competition and consumerism
  • Current debate around health policy at the
    national level
  • Steps toward achieving improved cost, quality,
    and access
  • Key questions to ask

3
How did we get here?
  • The first modern group health insurance plan was
    formed in 1929.
  • Blue Cross and Blue Shield entities begin
    offering group health plans in 1932.
  • Several large life insurance companies entered
    the health insurance field in the 30s and
    40s.

3
4
How did we get here?
  • WWII wage freezes imposed by the federal
    government.
  • Employee benefit plans proliferated in the 40s
    and 50s. Strong unions bargained for better
    benefit packages, including tax-free,
    employer-sponsored health insurance.

4
5
How did we get here?
  • Social Security was expanded in 1954 to provide
    disability benefits.
  • Medicare and Medicaid were implemented January 1,
    1966 during the Johnson administration.
  • ERISA, passed in 1974 as a pension reform bill,
    reinforced the employers role in providing
    health benefits.

5
6
How did we get here?
  • 1970s Private health insurance moves toward
    comprehensive major medical insurance.
  • The Federal HMO Act was legislated by Congress in
    1973.
  • PPOs, HMOs, and POS plans emerge during the 80s
    and 90s as the prevalent form of private health
    insurance.

6
7
How did we get here?
  • By 2001 93 of private insurance was of the
    managed care variety.
  • Over the last 7 years, the clear trend has been
    away from HMOs and toward CDHPs (consumer-driven
    health plans).

7
8
Key Concepts
  • Health care is NOT the same as health
    insurance. Health insurance is nothing more
    than a means of financing and managing the
    financial risk of health care services.
  • We no longer have health insurance. What we
    actually have is a form of prepaid health care,
    thanks to 25 years of managed care. And over the
    years legislators have helped by piling on
    benefit mandates to satisfy constituent
    complaints and special interest requests, driving
    up health insurance costs for everyone along the
    way.

9
Key Concepts
  • Health insurance is expensive because health care
    is expensive.
  • Any legislative proposal that aims to reform
    health care is NOT legitimate if it does not
    address health cares underlying cost drivers and
    embrace personal responsibility.
  • There is no problem with access to health
    insurance. The issue is AFFORDABILITY, both in
    terms of the premiums for coverage AND the less
    than uniform tax treatment of such coverage.

10
Key Facts Current insured and uninsured
statistics
  • In 1940 the total US population was 127 million.
    About 12 million Americans (9.4) were covered by
    some form of private health insurance.
  • At the end of 2006 249.8 million (84.2) were
    insured, and 47.0 million uninsured (15.8).

10
Source Census Bureau publication - Income,
Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the
United States 2006 - http//www.census.gov/prod/2
007pubs/p60-233.pdf
11
Key Facts Where do Americans Illinoisans get
their health insurance?
  • Sources of health insurance coverage

Source U.S. Illinois
Employer 54 59
Individual 5 4
Medicaid 13 11
Medicare 12 12
Other Public 1 0
Uninsured 16 14
11
Source Kaiser Family Foundation, Health
Insurance Coverage of the Total Population,
states (2005-2006), U.S. (2006)
12
Key Facts Who are the uninsured, and how many
are there?
  • Being uninsured for most is a temporary
    situation. About 75 are without coverage lt 1
    yr.
  • 1/3 are eligible for public programs but not
    enrolled.
  • 20 earn 50,000 or more, and more than ½ of this
    group actually earn 75,000 or more.
  • More than 22 of the 47 million are younger than
    35, and many can afford insurance but simply
    choose to go without.
  • Chronically uninsured estimate 5-6,
    principally citizens in the 18-40 age group with
    incomes below 300 of FPL.

12
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Income, Poverty and
Health Insurance Coverage in the United States
2006 The Uninsured in America, Blue Cross, Blue
Shield Foundation, 2005.
13
Key Facts Current tax policy
  • The biggest tax break that citizens get is the
    federal income tax exclusion for employment-based
    health insurance.
  • The economic value of this tax exclusion is about
    160 billion. Contrast this with the value of
    the deduction of mortgage interest in the current
    FY budget, which is only 89 billion.

14
Key Facts Health care spending in the U.S.
  • Total spending, public and private, was 2.1
    trillion in 2006, or 7,026 per person, 16 of
    the gross domestic product (GDP).
  • U.S. health care spending is expected to
    increase, on average, by 6.7 per year, reaching
    4 trillion by 2016, or 20 of GDP.
  • This compares to double-digit increases in the
    1980s a 7.3 average from 1990 to 1995 5.7
    from 1995 to 2000 (during the peak years of
    managed care) and 8.2 from 2000 to 2004.

Source The Boomers Are Coming, But Dont Panic
Yet - http//healthaffairs.org/blog/2008/02/28/the
-boomers-are-coming-but-dont-panic-yet/
15
Key Facts Health care spending in the U.S.
  • The government is the single greatest
    contributor to this problem by the nature of the
    tax code and the structure of health care
    entitlement spending and these can be corrected
    with fundamental changes in public policy to
    restore the markets vitality.

Source U. S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-WI, HEALTH
SPENDING The Problem Is Government, Not The
Market, February 26, 2008 issue of Health Affairs
16
Key Facts Administrative costs
  • According to CMS estimates, the administrative
    costs, taxes, profits, and other non-benefit
    expenses of private health plans have averaged
    12.4 of premiums over the last 40 years. This
    includes all types of health insurance purchased
    privately, ranging from employer-based coverage
    to individually purchased plans, Medigap and
    long-term care insurance, but do not include
    private health plans operating in Medicare or
    Medicaid.

16
Source CMS Office of the Actuary, January 2005
17
Key Facts Cost drivers
  • Preventable medical errors - Americans receive
    recommended care only 55 of the time, and
    between 44,00098,000 people die in hospitals
    each year because of medical errors.
  • Litigious environment - Doctors order more tests,
    medications, and referrals than are medically
    necessary principally to protect against
    accusations of negligence.
  • Medical liability costs and defensive medicine,
    combined, account for about 10 of our nations
    health care spending.

17
Sources National Institute of Medicine
American Institute for Preventive Medicine
Towers Perrin. U.S. Tort Costs 2005 Update.
March 2006
18
Key Facts Cost drivers
  • Cost-shifting - A hidden tax imposed when
    health care providers increase the prices they
    charge to private payers to offset losses from
    uncompensated and charity care and declining
    reimbursements from Medicare and Medicaid.

18
Source PricewaterhouseCoopers for Americas
Health Insurance Plans. The Factors Fueling
Rising Healthcare Costs 2006. February 2006.
19
Key Facts Cost drivers
  • Increased utilization In 2006 alone higher
    utilization of services accounted for 43 of the
    year-over-year increases in the costs of health
    care, fueled by increased consumer demand, new
    and more intensive medical treatments and
    defensive medicine, and aging and unhealthy
    lifestyles.
  • Unhealthy lifestyles
  • Smoking, obesity, and inactivity are the top
    causes.

19
Source PricewaterhouseCoopers for Americas
Health Insurance Plans. The Factors Fueling
Rising Healthcare Costs 2006. February 2006.
20
Key Facts Important U.S. stats
  • In the U.S. we spend much more in saving
    prematurely born infants and extending the life
    of our elderly than do other countries. (Wesbury
    1990, Wennberg 2006)
  • Pregnancy, birth, and abortion rates among girls
    aged 15 to 19 are higher in the U.S. than in
    other developed countries. (Singh and Darroch
    2000)
  • Obesity rate for U.S. adult population is nearly
    double that of Canada and substantially higher
    than the EU. (Anderson and Hussey 2000).

Source Ten Principles of Health Care Policy,
2007, Heartland Institute
21
Key Facts Behavior Lifestyle U.S. Weight Gain
1986-2006
No Country Can Fund All the Consequences Hyperten
sion Type 2 Diabetes Osteoarthritis Stroke
Coronary Heart Gallbladder Sleep
Apnea Respiratory Issues Some Cancers
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Obesity Trends Among U.S. Adults (BMIgt30)
No data lt10 1014
1519 2024 2529
30
Source Centers for Disease Control Prevention,
2006 Behavioral Risk Factors Surveillance System
22
International comparisons
  • Canadians live 2 ½ years longer than Americans
    and Europeans live a little more than a year
    longer than we do. Reasons for this (other than
    a lack of access to health insurance) include
  • Americans are 3 times more likely than Canadians
    to die in auto accidents, and 10 times more
    likely to die (than our neighbors to the north)
    as a victim of a violent crime.
  • Elaborating on a point made in the previous
    slide, Americans eat more and move less than
    people in other countries. More than 60 of
    Americans are overweight, and almost 40 are
    obese.

Source Obesity World Health Organization, 2006.
NOTE Obesity is commonly defined as a Body Mass
Index (BMI) of greater than or equal to 30.
23
International comparisons
  • The U.S. spends more on its healthcare than other
    countries, although all countries are
    experiencing high rates of spending growth.
  • America's health care spending drives much of the
    world's medical innovations.
  • Health outcomes improve with income even under
    single-payer systems.  Informed estimates suggest
    this gradient is no steeper in the U.S. than it
    is in Canada.

24
International comparisons - WHO
  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • WHOs rankings puts the U.S. at 37th out of 191
    countries.
  • Countries with socialized health care tend to be
    ranked higher simply because citizens are treated
    equally even when the quality of care is
    extremely poor. Meanwhile, countries in which
    citizens have unequal access to medical care tend
    to be ranked lower, even when the overall quality
    of care is superior.
  • By the WHO's logic, treating people equally
    matters more than treating people well. So
    theoretically, a country with a negligent health
    care system could improve its rankings just by
    neglecting everybody more equally.

24
Source How Good Is Our Health Care System?,
published on June 30, 2008 at www.galen.org.
25
International comparisons - WHO
  • Great Britain and Canada rate much better than
    us, yet
  • 1 million British citizens currently in need of
    care are waiting for hospital admission, and
    100,000 operations are canceled each year because
    of shortages of operating rooms, equipment or
    personnel.
  • Canada has more than 800,000 citizens awaiting
    medical procedures. Many of these patients will
    die before they get the treatments they need.
    Those who can come to the United States for
    medical care.
  • A very crucial reading of a health care system
    should be how well you do when you get sick. Yet
    WHO chooses not to include this data in its
    survey.

25
Source How Good Is Our Health Care System?,
published on June 30, 2008 at www.galen.org.
26
International comparisons
  • Recently public opinion surveys were conducted in
    26 single-payer countries. In 25, majorities of
    respondents identified health system reform in
    their countries as an urgent priority.
  • In Great Britain, in a November 2006 survey over
    half the respondents rated the NHS worse than in
    1996.
  • Isnt it comforting to know that we are not the
    only ones in the Western developed world who have
    problems with their healthcare systems?

26
Sources The Stockholm Network, Impatient for
Change (2004) and Poles Apart (2005) Nov.
2006 article www.inthenews.co.uk
27
International comparisons - Canada
  • A lawsuit reached the Supreme Court of Canada in
    June, 2005. A Quebec businessman who waited 12
    months for a hip surgery wanted to pay out of his
    own pocket to get it done in Canada but was not
    permitted.
  • Another lawsuit was filed in September of 2006 by
    a Calgary man who paid for a state-of-the-art hip
    replacement in the U.S. after being told he was
    too old to qualify for it under Albertas
    provincial health plan.

27
28
International comparisons Japan
  • Everyone between the ages of 40 and 74 56
  • million people are now required to have their
  • waistlines measured regularly.
  • The maximum waistline for men is 33.5 inches.
  • Thats the maximum. For women its 35.4 inches.
  • Those whose waistlines are larger will have three
  • months to shape up, or undergo whats being
  • called reeducation.
  • Those who persist in ignoring the will of the
  • government will face fines and other penalties.

Source Institute for Policy Innovation,
www.ipi.org, July, 2008
29
The case for competition and consumerism
  • We believe making consumers aware of the actual
    cost of health services will improve the
    relationship between the consumer (i.e., patient)
    and the physician.
  • Once consumers control payment for most services,
    they will become more inclined to shop for
    services and inquire about the cost and quality
    of that care.

30
The case for competition and consumerism
  • Market forces work in healthcare just as they do
    in
  • other markets. To wit
  • Price controls lead to shortages. Medicaid
    programs set fees for doctor visits below market
    prices. As a result, there is a severe shortage
    of doctors willing to treat Medicaid patients.
  • Competition reduces prices. While health care
    costs overall have risen dramatically in recent
    years, prices for items not covered by insurance
    such as Lasik, cosmetic surgical procedures, and
    meds that have gone over the counter (e.g.,
    Claritin), have fallen.

Source Ten Principles of Health Care Policy,
2007, Heartland Institute
31
The case for competition and consumerism
  • Consumer Driven Health Plans (CDHPs) got a jump
    start in June of 2002 when the Internal Revenue
    Service confirmed the favorable tax treatment of
    employer-provided coverage and medical care
    expense reimbursements under health reimbursement
    arrangements (HRAs).
  • Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) were created
    shortly thereafter following the passage of the
    Medicare Modernization Act in December of 2003.

32
The case for competition and consumerism
market trends
  • Year-over year HRA / HSA enrollment
  • Jan '06 Jan '07 Jan '08
  • HRAs 2.9 M 4.3 M 5.0 M
  • HSAs 3.2 M 4.5 M 6.1 M
  • TOTALS 6.1 M 8.8 M 11.1 M
  • Comment HRA growth is slowing, but HSA growth
    is accelerating.

Sources Consumer Driven Market Report and AHIP
Researchs 4th annual survey of enrollment in
HSA-qualified health plans, published 4/30/ 2008.
33
The case for competition and consumerism HSA
market trends
  • HSA distribution 30 of HSAs are in the small
    group market, 45 in the large group market, and
    the remaining 25 in the individual market.
  • Small businesses are strongly embracing HSAs
    HSA enrollment in the small group market
    increased 70 over the past year.  Over 1.8
    million Americans working for small businesses
    now have coverage through HSAs.
  • HSAs continue to make health insurance more
    affordable for the uninsured -- HSA products
    accounted for 31 of new coverage issued in the
    small-group market and 27 of their new purchases
    of health insurance in the individual market.

Source AHIP Researchs 4th annual survey of
enrollment in HSA-qualified health plans,
published 4/30/ 2008.
34
The case for competition and consumerism
market trends
  • In 2006 the Treasury Department projected more
    than 21 million covered by HSAs by the end of
    2010 if the HSA rules were revised, which
    occurred in December of that year.
  • HSA enrollment growth should reach 10 million
    covered lives by the end of 2008.
  • The average HSA established now will have a
    22,000 balance ten years from now. Unspent
    balances in HSAs will help employees better plan
    for and afford health care in retirement.

Sources Americas Health Insurance Plans,
April, 2007 Fact Sheet Dramatic Growth of
HSAs - http//www.treas.gov/offices/public-affair
s/hsa/
35
The case for competition and consumerism -
Takeaways
  • Tax-favored account-based plans should swing the
    pendulum away from third party payment and
    pre-paid healthcare and move us back toward more
    of a direct payment model, which the baby boomers
    grew up with when the family doctor used to make
    house calls and Dad handed the doctor a check or
    paid him with cash.
  • Once account-based plans achieve critical mass
    (2011-2012), their prevalence should help curb
    overutilization, a significant healthcare cost
    driver. 

35
36
Recent assaults on the private market 3rd-party
substantiation of HSA spending
  • Currently HSA distributions are
    self-substantiated. 3rd party substantiation of
    expenses would be a costly and time-consuming
    process.  
  • Most HSA payments are made with a specially
    designated debit card, so its easy to track
    where the money goes. 
  • GAO study gt90 of HSA withdrawals went toward
    qualified medical expenses.

36
37
Recent assaults on the private market Medicare
Advantage
Medicare Improvement for Patients and Providers
Act of 2008 On Wednesday, July 9th, the Senate
passed Medicare payment legislation, H.R. 6331,
by a veto-proof margin of 69-30 following a House
tally, also veto-proof, of 355-59 last month.
And then on Tuesday, July 15th, following
President Bushs veto of the bill the day prior,
the House voted 383 to 41 to override it, and the
Senate voted 70 to 26.
37
38
Recent assaults on the private market Medicare
Advantage
  • The Act is an 18-month fix to the
    provider-funding issue, and is being financed by
    12 billion in cuts to the private Medicare
    Advantage program. 
  • More than 20 of Medicare beneficiaries choose
    the Medicare Advantage option.
  • Also, the Act includes new and potentially
    problematic marketing and sales restrictions on
    insurance producers selling private Medicare
    products, despite the fact that CMS has an
    ongoing proposed rule for policy changes in this
    area.

38
39
What the candidates are saying Senator Barack
Obama
  • Sen. Barack Obama recently announced a plan
    designed to help businesses afford health
    insurance, but the ideas would perpetuate today's
    problems and add new bureaucracy in the process.
  • Small businesses would get refundable tax credits
    to offset 50 of the amount they pay for health
    insurance for their workers and have the
    government take over a portion of the
    catastrophic costs of high-cost employees. 

For a reliable critique of the Obama plan, be
sure to read High Stakes, published on July 18,
2008 by the Galen Institute (www.galen.org)
40
What the candidates are saying Senator John McCain
  • Health insurance for most nonelderly Americans is
    purchased with funds from three sources (1) an
    employer contribution, (2) an employee
    contribution and (3) a government tax subsidy. 
  • The McCain health plan is based on the idea that
    the first two contributions should be determined
    by individual choice and competition in the
    marketplace.  The government's contribution,
    however, would be the same for everyone 2,500
    for every adult and 5,000 for every family.  

40
For a reliable critique of the McCain plan, be
sure to read Dr. John Goodmans blog post
entitled John McCains Health Tax Credit,
published on July 14, 2008 by the National Center
for Policy Analysis (http//www.john-goodman-blog.
com/john-mccains-health-tax-credit/)
41
Side-by-side comparison of the candidates
proposals
  • www.health08.org/sidebyside.cfm
  • Prepared by the Kaiser Family Foundation and
    Health Policy Alternatives, Inc. based on
    information on the candidates' websites as
    supplemented by information from candidate
    speeches, the campaign debates, and news reports.
    The sources of information are identified for
    each candidate's summary (with links to the
    Internet). The comparison highlights information
    on the candidates' positions related to access to
    health care coverage, cost containment, improving
    the quality of care and financing. Information
    will be updated regularly as the campaign
    unfolds.

41
42
NPR event September 16, 2008 Debate Venue
Rockefeller Universitys Caspary Auditorium
Universal health coverage should be the federal
government's responsibility http//www.intelligen
cesquaredus.org/Event.aspx?Event30


Art Kellermann Art Kellermann   Paul Krugman Paul Krugman   Michael Rachlis Michael Rachlis
Michael Cannon   Sally Pipes   John Stossel
42
43
Steps toward achieving improved cost, quality,
and access
  • Do not mandate guaranteed issue and modified
    community rating. The commercial health
    insurance market in Illinois is not as bad as
    many (from a regulatory perspective) but
    certainly can (and should) be improved through
    market-based reforms.
  • Health IT is long overdue, although a small
    measure of it is included with the new Medicare
    legislation.

43
44
Steps toward achieving improved cost, quality,
and access
  • Tax equity Individuals who dont have job-based
    coverage should at least receive the same tax
    break on their health insurance premiums that the
    self-employed and citizens with job-based
    coverage receive.
  • Federal health insurance tax credits A major
    demographic of the uninsured are those who make
    too much to qualify for government health
    programs but cannot afford health insurance even
    when subsidized by their employers. Targeted tax
    credits could help.

44
For more information on health ins. tax credits
visit http//www.nahu.org/legislative/uninsured/cr
edits.cfm
45
Steps toward achieving improved cost, quality,
and access
  • Expand consumerism by increasing health care
    quality and cost transparency. The private
    market will figure this out long before its
    legislated.
  • Encourage employer-sponsored wellness programs,
    and incorporate wellness and disease management
    programs into all public and private health
    plans.
  • Implement meaningful medical malpractice reform.

45
46
Key questions to ask
  • What are the appropriate roles for governments,
    individuals, and businesses?
  • Do the policy proposals address the underlying
    causes of unnecessary health care spending, or
    just try to impose caps and mandates?
  • Do the reforms empower consumers to make better
    choices, or leave them with less control over
    their health care and fewer choices?

47
Key questions to ask
  • What role should personal responsibility play?
    What happens if we discourage it?
  • What will things look like not next year or 5
    years from now, but rather 10, 20, and 30 years
    from now?
  • What can I do as a thought leader to effect
    change for the good?

48
  • Thank You

48
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