Title: Certificate of Need CON
1Certificate of Need (CON)
- HCAI 5313 Economic Aspects of Health Care
Administration - John D. Johnston
- April 30, 2005
2What is Certificate Of Need?
- State CON laws generally prevent firms from
entering certain areas of the health care market
unless they can demonstrate to state authorities
that there is an unmet need for their services.
Burden of justification falls on the supplier,
not the consumer
3Historical Overview
- National Health Planning and Resources
Development Act of 1974 - Powerful incentives for states to enact CON laws
- HCFA reimbursement linked to CON approval
- By 1980, every state except Louisiana had enacted
CON programs - In 1986 Congress repealed the 1974 Act, but many
states continue to maintain CON programs
Existence today is based on a repealed initiative
4National Health Planning and Resources
Development Act
- Created 200 geographic Health Service Areas
(HSA) - Health Systems Agency (HSA) established for
oversight - consisted of representatives from
local providers, purchasers, and businesses - HSA establishes targets for efficient utilization
in their Health Services Area - HSA approves or denies all CON applications
The first serious possibility fornational
healthcare system. (Somers)
5Rationale of Certificate Of Need
- Control costs by restricting provider investment
- Assumption of Health Planning Act market
failure - Competition does not limit excess supply
- The result is excess supply and needless
duplication of services - Excess supply creates unnecessary demand
- CON was created in the era of cost-based
reimbursement - Patients not price sensitive (insurance effect)
Did PPS solve the problem that CON was created to
address?
6Roemers Law
- A built bed is a filled bed is a billed bed
7Arguments for and against CON
- AGAINST
- Defining right
- Increase the cost of health care by reducing or
eliminating competition - Limit access to new technology in favor of old
technology - Administrative burden
- Politics (quid pro quo)
- FOR
- Establish the right number of facilities
offering the right mix of services - Maintain the cost of health care at an acceptable
level (arms race) - Eliminate unnecessary care caused by excess supply
8What about today?
- 37 states have some level of CON requirement
(hospital, long-term care, service expansion,
etc.) - 51 of the U.S. population live in CON states
- 45 of U.S. hospitals are located in CON states
- 83 of specialty hospitals built or in
development are in non-CON states
9Do CON laws control health care costs?
- 1988 FTC Study The Effect of State CON Laws on
Hospital Costs - Strong CON laws do not lead to lower costs, but
may actually increase costs - Hennessy study
- Premiums in Kansas and Missouri are generally
the sameone state has CON and the other does
not - FTC/DOJ Report
- A CON rule that restricts capital investment in
new beds does nothing to prevent hospitals from
adding (other costly services)
10FTC/DOJ Conclusion on CON Laws
- Generally not successful in controlling health
care costs - Can pose anticompetitive risks
- CON Laws risk entrenching oligopolies and eroding
consumer welfare - There are other, more effective means of
controlling costs that do not pose
anticompetitive risks
11My concluding thoughts
- No empirical data to confirm or deny CON value
- Difficult to perform cost comparisons while
controlling only for CON status - Assumption that political abuses abound
- Limits ability to fully assess value when the
process can be over-ridden due to political
influence - No quality comparisons
- Any attempt at analysis tends to focus on costs
- Number of beds is not directly related to
intensity of services