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Public Policy for Health Care

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Public Policy for Health Care Government Involvement in the Health Care Market As health insurer Medicare and Medicaid Veterans, military personnel, Native Americans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public Policy for Health Care


1
Public Policy for Health Care
2
Government Involvement in the Health Care Market
  • As health insurer
  • Medicare and Medicaid
  • Veterans, military personnel, Native Americans
  • Public hospitals, clinics, psychiatric centers
  • As direct provider of services
  • Government paid employees in Veteran system
  • Government paid employees in DoD system
  • Setting reimbursement rates for providers in
    Medicare/Medicaid

3
Government Involvement in the Health Care Market
  • Financier of research and monitoring public
    health
  • NIH biomedical research
  • Other health related research
  • Tax policy
  • Sin taxes
  • Waiver of employer spending on health insurance

4
Government Involvement in the Health Care Market
  • Regulator
  • Drugs and medical devices
  • Regulation of rates
  • Capacity approvals for nursing homes
  • Insurance rate regulation
  • Standards for malpractice litigation

5
Government Involvement in the Health Care Market
  • On what grounds is it justified?

6
Justification
  • Externalities
  • Individual lifestyle choices
  • Market failures
  • Support/replace markets
  • Income (resource) distribution
  • Re-distributive policies

7
If the government does get involved in the health
care market..
  • What are inputs to public health?

8
Determinants of Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Risk perceptions
  • Risky behaviors
  • Public health
  • Medical care
  • Random effects

9
Public health dilemma
10
Three goals of a public health delivery system
  • Right amount of care
  • To the right amount of people
  • With the costs equitably distributed

11
Types of problems facing public policy makers
  • Why are medical health costs rising so rapidly
  • Should we have public or private provision of
    health insurance?
  • Should receipt of health insurance be linked to
    employment?

12
Knowledge of the Market
13
Trends in Medical SpendingNational health care
expenditures in billions of
Year Total Per Capita GDP 1970 262.7 1,224 7
.1 1975 344.7 1,535 8.0 1980 445.1 1,894 8.9
1985 595.0 2,399 10.2 1990 790.9 3,048 12.1
1993 915.1 3,416 13.6 1994 949.4 3,510 13.7
1996 medical inflation rate gt CPI Hospital room
prices driving the inflation factor
14
Source of Health Insurance 1993
Health Workers NoWorker Coverage ful
l-time part-time self in family Employer 75.0 5
4.4 41.5 10.9 Medicaid 2.4 7.2 2.7 54.6 Othe
r 1.0 2.2 2.6 6.3 Non-group 6.2 14.5 25.4 7
.0 Uninsured 15.4 21.7 27.8 21.1
Employers are being asked to pick up a greater
share of health insurance costs.
15
Facts
  • Medical care cost have been increasing at an
    alarming rate
  • Expansion of benefits in the public sector has
    been larger than in the private sector
  • Expansion of enrollment in the public sector has
    been larger than in the private sector

16
Why?
17
What has accounted for the increase in per capita
medical care?
  • Demographics (2)
  • Income (5)
  • Spread of insurance (13)
  • Cost disease in services sector (5)
  • Administrative expenses (13)
  • Inflation in factor prices or economic rents
    (3)
  • New technologies and resulting over consumption
    of medical care (59)

18
Diffusion of new technologies
  • New and better treatment options
  • Dental care, joint replacement, orthroscopic
    surgery, lazic surgery,etc
  • Diffusion of new technologies
  • Mamograms, colonoscopy, skin biopsies,
    cholesterol drugs, etc
  • Change in treatment options
  • Gall bladder stones, heart surgery, etc

19
Heart Attack
  • Medical Management
  • Drugs, monitoring, counseling, treatment (100)
  • Cardiac Catherization
  • Coronary bypass surgery (300)
  • Angioplasty (160)

Essentially all of the growth of costs for
treatment of heart attacks has resulted from the
diffusion of new technologies
20
What is the marginal value of more health care?
  • Do people who receive these additional treatments
    live longer and fare better than those who dont?
  • Is more care resulting in better outcomes?

21
The impact of new technologies
  • Average value of technology
  • Is technology on net valuable?
  • Marginal value of technology
  • What is the impact of more care on mortality and
    morbidity?
  • Overprovision of care?
  • Root problem in health care cost inflation?

22
Studies on the Marginal Value of Health Care
  • Comparison studies of insured and uninsured
    patients
  • Comparison studies of private and state
    physician care
  • Comparison studies of more intensive and less
    intensive treatment options

23
The marginal value of new technology
  • Overuse of care
  • New technologies and medical ethics
  • Genetic testing?
  • Demand-side explanation
  • Moral hazard and over insurance
  • Supply-side explanation
  • Supplier induced demand and the medical arms race

24
Solutions to over consumption of medical care?
Basic problem is one of separation of insurance
and provision of care
Providers decide on treatment
Insurers pay the bills
25
Solutions to over consumption of medical care?
Basic problem is one of separation of insurance
and provision of care
No knowledge of probability of illness
Socially desirable optimal insurance coverage
26
Who bears the cost of medical care financing?
  • Optimal insurance markets
  • Risks are large and neither the insurer or
    insured know the individuals probability of
    experiencing a particular medical condition
  • Adverse selection
  • Selection of health insurance based on prior
    knowledge and resulting price inflation
  • Experience rating, risk selection, and market
    failure
  • Price discrimination and refusal of care

27
Three solutions to the problem of risk selection
  • Contracts for more than one year
  • Mandatory pooling on a basis other than risk
  • Risk adjustment
  • Taxes on, rebates to, insurers who insure
    healthier or sicker individuals

28
Solutions to overprovision of care
  • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)
  • Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs)
  • Point of Services Plans (POSs)

Logic Increase the choice that people have over
different insurance policies, particularly
policies that will limit the amount of care
provided, and increase the financial returns from
choosing less expensive health insurance.
29
Growth of Managed Care
Integration of insurance and delivery function in
health care
30
Evidence of the effectiveness of managed care in
limiting costs
  • Short-run effects
  • 10 cost saving
  • Slower cost growth
  • Fee for service lower
  • No evidence of health impact
  • Long-run effects
  • No evidence of long-term cost savings
  • No evidence of health impact

31
Public Policy for Health Care
32
Government Involvement in the Health Care Market
  • As health insurer
  • As direct provider of services
  • Financier of research and monitoring public
    health
  • Tax policy
  • Regulator

33
Justification
  • Externalities
  • Market failures
  • Income (resource) distribution

34
Three goals of a public health delivery system
  • Right amount of care
  • To the right amount of people
  • With the costs equitably distributed

35
Facts
  • Medical care cost have been increasing at an
    alarming rate
  • Expansion of benefits in the public sector has
    been larger than in the private sector
  • Expansion of enrollment in the public sector has
    been larger than in the private sector

36
What has accounted for the increase in per capita
medical care?
  • Demographics
  • Income
  • Spread of insurance
  • Cost disease in services sector
  • Administrative expenses
  • Inflation in factor prices or economic rents
  • New technologies and resulting over consumption
    of medical care

37
Diffusion of new technologies
  • New and better treatment options
  • Diffusion of new technologies
  • Change in treatment options

38
The marginal value of new technology
  • Overuse of care
  • Demand-side explanation (moral hazard)
  • Supply-side explanation

39
Who bears the cost of medical care financing?
  • Optimal insurance markets
  • Adverse selection
  • Experience rating, risk selection, and market
    failure

40
Three solutions to the problem of risk selection
  • Contracts for more than one year
  • Mandatory pooling on a basis other than risk
  • Risk adjustment
  • Taxes on, rebates to, insurers who insure
    healthier or sicker individuals

41
Solutions to overprovision of care
  • Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)
  • Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs)
  • Point of Services Plans (POSs)

Logic Increase the choice that people have over
different insurance policies, particularly
policies that will limit the amount of care
provided, and increase the financial returns from
choosing less expensive health insurance.
42
Growth of Managed Care
Integration of insurance and delivery function in
health care
43
Evidence of the effectiveness of managed care in
limiting costs
  • Short-run effects
  • 10 cost saving
  • Slower cost growth
  • Fee for service lower
  • No evidence of health impact
  • Long-run effects
  • No evidence of long-term cost savings
  • No evidence of health impact

44
Public Health Care Programs
  • Medicaid
  • Medicare

45
Medicaid
  • Dominant public program for financing basic
    health and long-term care services for low-income
    Americans

46
Medicaid Entitlement Program
  • Jointly funded by federal and state funds
  • Rich states 50/50 cost sharing
  • Poor states 80/20 cost sharing
  • Administered by the states
  • Eligibility not tied to TANF benefit receipt
  • State flexibility
  • Eligibility criteria
  • Benefit package
  • Payment policies

47
Medicaid Entitlement Program
  • Covers only 46-60 of poor and near poor
  • Half Medicaid beneficiaries are children

48
Medicaid Entitlement Program
  • Covers only 46 of poor and near poor
  • Half Medicaid beneficiaries are children
  • Only 23 are adults in families with children
  • Distribution of beneficiaries does not match
    distribution of expenditures
  • 67.7 goes to the elderly and disabled
  • Mainly acute and long-term care
  • Expenditures dominated by hospital expenditures

49
Medicaid Spending Growth
  • 1988-1992 saw an increase in Medicaid spending of
    22 per year

50
Medicaid Spending Growth1988-1992
  • Enrollment Growth
  • De-linking of eligibility (1987)
  • Expansion of SSI eligibility
  • 1988 Medicare Catastrophic Act
  • Low income elderly and disabled
  • Learning disabled, AIDS, substance abuse, other
    social/medical problems
  • Recession

51
Medicaid Spending Growth1988-1992
  • Utilization Growth
  • Population growth
  • Expansion of services covered

52
Medicaid Spending Growth1988-1992
  • Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Payments
  • Other Factors
  • Inflation in health care prices
  • Growth in nursing homes

53
Why the expenditure slowdown in 1992?
Medicaid growth has averaged only 9.5 per year
from 1992-1995
54
Medicaid Expenditure Slowdown
  • Enrollment
  • TANF rolls
  • Spending per enrollee
  • Managed care?
  • DSH Payments
  • 1991 and 1993 legislation?
  • Other Factors
  • inflation in factor prices

55
Medicare Program
  • Major public health care program for the elderly
    (1965), the disabled, and people with end-stage
    renal disease (1972)

56
Medicare Financing
  • Part A (Hospital Insurance)
  • Accounts for 2/3rds of the program costs
  • Inpatient care, skilled nursing, home health
    care, hospice
  • Funded by Hospital Insurance Trust Fund
  • Hospital Insurance Trust Fund funded by a 2.9
    payroll tax on all wage/salary income
  • All 65 elderly are eligible to receive benefits
    if they (or their spouse) are on Social Security

57
Medicare Financing
  • Part B (Supplemental Medical Insurance)
  • Accounts for 1/3rd of program costs
  • Physicians, outpatient, lab services, ambulatory
    care
  • Funded by Supplemental Medical Insurance Trust
    Fund
  • Supplemental Medical Insurance Trust Fund funded
    by beneficiaries and general revenues
  • Beneficiary premiums approximately 50/month

58
Medicare v. Private Insurance
Medicare
Private Insurance
  • Does not cover outpatient prescription drugs
  • Limited coverage for long-term care
  • No stop loss provision
  • Unrestricted choice of care provider
  • Covers outpatient prescription drugs
  • Does not cover long-term care
  • Usually has a stop loss provision
  • Some have choice restrictions

59
Medicare Benefits
  • Medicare covers approximately ½ of the medical
    needs of the aged
  • Additional insurance
  • Former employers
  • Medigap insurance
  • Neither cover long-term care
  • Long-term care insurance

60
Link between Medicare and Medicaid
Distributional effects
  • Medicaid must pick up Medicares premiums,
    deductible, and coinsurance for poor aged and
    disabled people.

61
Medicare Cost Containment
62
Medicare Managed Care
  • Insurance plans that provide treatment using
    specified sets of providers and beneficiaries
    have no cost sharing in the program

63
Medicare Managed Care
  • Narrow choice of plan providers
  • Reimbursement rates at 95 of average
    fee-for-service in the area
  • Or, fixed per patient fee (capitization)
  • HMO monitors and controls service provision
  • Usually covers prescription drugs

64
Medicare Managed Care
  • Only 10 or all Medicare patients are enrolled in
    Medicare Managed Care programs. Why?
  • Limited choice
  • Limited financial incentive to join

65
Medicares successes
66
Medicares successes
  • Improved access to health care among elderly and
    disabled
  • Reduced impoverishment related to large medical
    bills
  • Income from Medicare has become the bedrock for
    many medical practices
  • Has contributed substantially to overall public
    health

67
The problems with Medicare
68
Problems with Medicare
  • Cost of program places it in jeopardy

69
To put these statistics in perspective, public
sector spending on education has remained
constant at about 5 of GDP for over two decades
70
(No Transcript)
71
Cost of Medicare
Number of Enrollees
Cost of Care
  • Retirement of baby boomers 2010-2030
  • Aging of the population
  • Twice the cost for the 85 group
  • Dependency ratio
  • Lower fertility rates
  • Less wage earners
  • Percentage increase in costs versus percentage
    increase in payroll taxes
  • Real per capita spending

72
Problems with Medicare
  • Cost of program places it in jeopardy
  • Wasted resources
  • Cost sharing so low that beneficiaries have no
    incentive to limit care or choose between care
    options, particularly those with supplemental
    insurance
  • Providers who are paid fee-for-service have no
    incentive to cut back on services
  • Overprovision of care based on technological
    development and ethical practices

73
Political Context for Medicare Reform
74
Political Environment
  • Medicare is an enormously popular program
  • Medicare is a universal program
  • Medicare coverage is fairly comprehensive
  • Interrelatedness between the public and private
    systems
  • If Medicare reimbursement rates substantially lt
    than private rates access to care may be a huge
    problem

75
Medicare-Options for the Future
  • Payment reductions
  • Increasing beneficiary payments
  • Restructuring Medicare program
  • Capping Medicare Spending

76
Payment Reductions
  • Fee-for-service excessive care
  • Prospective Payment System (PPS) for inpatient
    hospital care
  • Weighted base rate per patient
  • Offsetting behavior squeezing the balloon
  • Targeted only price not the technology intensity
    of service compensation by increasing number of
    services

77
Increasing Beneficiary Payments
  • Increased cost sharing
  • Huge distribution impact
  • Increased Part B premium contributions
  • Changes relative contributions of working and
    non-working population
  • Doesnt address overall cost containment
  • Increased age at eligibility

78
Restructuring Medicare Program
  • Convert to a choice-based program
  • Coupon system and cost sharing
  • Financial incentive for efficient choices
  • Guaranteed plan for guaranteed price
  • more efficient choices
  • Less rapid increase in costs
  • - Bigger base package cost (LTC, Rx drugs)
  • - Quality assurance (coupon value v. care)
  • - Service availability (coupon value v. care)

79
Restructuring Medicare Program
  • Global Budgets
  • Sectors (hospitals) paid a fixed amount for the
    entire year rather than separate payments for
    each patient/service

80
The Social Role of Medicare
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