Here’s why Republicans are finding it so hard to come up with a replacement for Obamacare
it appears to be accomplishing one of its important goals of “bending the health-care cost curve.” Paul Van de Water highlights a remarkable finding in this regard. He shows that the Congressional Budget Office projection of how much it expects the federal government to spend on health care has come down by about $600 billion since 2010.
.. After growing 2 and 7 percent in 2015 and 2016, insurers in the state-based exchanges raised the cost of the benchmark plan by an average of 25 percent.
.. about three-quarters of those in the exchanges could find a plan for $75/month or less.
.. if the ACA survives, time will tell whether this 2017 jump was the one-time correction many analysts believe it to be. Marketplace insurers appear to have initially underpriced premiums, in part because they may have initially overestimated the wellness of those buying coverage in the exchanges
.. In fact, even with the big 2017 increase, premiums are about where nonpartisan analysts thought they would be at this point.
.. Studies find that Medicaid is particularly helpful in stabilizing patients with chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and asthma. Medicaid patients are more likely to use preventive care and far less likely to experience catastrophic out-of-pocket medical expenses.
.. Medicaid eligibility during early childhood was found to reduce mortality rates among African Americans in their later teenage years by 13 to 20 percent.
.. Longitudinal studies that track children into adulthood find that children on Medicaid for more of their childhood earn more as adults and are more likely to attend and complete college.
.. Other positive outcomes include the fact that hospitals have seen a significant reduction in uncompensated care, but that reduction has occurred almost exclusively in the 32 states that opted for Medicaid expansion (including D.C.), which makes sense as low-income, uninsured people are those most responsible for uncompensated hospital care and are most likely to be covered by the expansion.
.. What do I mean by “we’ve taken health care out of the market?” Simply put, you show up to the supermarket hungry, and they don’t have to feed you. You show up to the ER sick, and they have to treat you. Unless we’re willing to punt on that commitment, and all evidence shows we’re not, the government will be a significant player in health care
.. The logic of insurance thus dictates that you’ll need to pool risk so that the healthy can subsidize the sick. Since some of the healthy won’t go for that deal, there needs to be a mandate to avoid an unbalanced risk pool leading to adverse selection, or the death spiral that health wonks warn about (with too many sick people in the risk pool, premiums must rise, pushing out the least ill, exacerbating the problem). But if you have a mandate, there will be those whose income is insufficient to comply, and they’ll need subsidies to afford coverage.
.. If you want to cover everyone, you need to pool risk. To do that, you need a mandate, and the mandate implies a subsidy.
.. Republicans seem to have somehow convinced themselves that people want to pay more out-of-pocket for health care — that’s certainly the philosophy behind their high-deductible plans and getting rid of the Medicaid expansion. I think they’re misreading the public.
.. Since 2000, funding for block-granted programs that serve low-income people fell by almost 40 percent once accounting for inflation and population growth.
.. Edwin Park estimates that over the next decade, the health plan being considered by the Republicans would shift over $500 billion in Medicaid costs to states. Park’s estimate implies ending the ACA’s Medicaid expansion, a stated goal of the repealers, leaving 11 million people without coverage, while also risking the coverage of the kids, seniors and disabled people who have long depended on Medicaid.
.. In other words, in the interest of providing low premiums to healthy persons, high-risk pools avoid the cross-subsidization that is basic to insurance. The only way that can work, however, is either if some other entity makes up the difference between spending and premium revenue, or those with preexisting conditions get a lot less care.
.. this whole high-deductible, HSAs play is based on the skin-in-the-game theory of cost control, i.e., the view that the more costs are directly shared with patients, the less unnecessary care patients will seek. But the problem here is that since few of us are doctors, we don’t always know what’s important and what’s wasteful.
.. 70 percent of the total value of HSA contributions comes from households with incomes above $100,000.
.. people with preexisting conditions have a track record of coverage gaps.
.. “about 23 percent of Americans with a preexisting condition (31 million people) experienced at least a one-month gap in coverage in 2014, and nearly one third (44 million) had at least a one-month gap of coverage during the two-year 2013 to 2014 period.”
.. I think of this continuous-coverage provision as the “kick-’em-while-they’re down” approach.
.. This part sounds a little like replacing Obamacare with the Affordable Care Act.
.. One recent study predicts that in five years, credits under the replacement plans will probably be about 40 percent to 55 percent less than those under the ACA.
.. My impression is that Americans want health care that is less complex and calls for less skin in the game, and yet Republicans appear to be teeing up the opposite.