Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health...

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Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health Care Legislative Conference Colorado Springs, Colorado <!--PICOTITLE=“Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next”--> <!--PICODATESETmmddyyyy=09202006-->

Transcript of Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health...

Page 1: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

Health System Reform: Why Now?

Why Colorado? Who’s Next?

Len M. Nichols, Ph.D.Director, Health Policy Program

New America Foundation

Hot Issues in Health Care Legislative Conference Colorado Springs, Colorado

November 17, 2006

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Page 2: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Overview

• Introduction to Health Markets• Sources of extreme stress • Why the national debate is stuck (for now)• Competing Visions• States as

– Laboratories– Catalysts

• How Colorado could inspire the nation

Page 3: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Are Health Markets “Different?”

• Information asymmetries– Clinician-patient– Consumer-insurer

• Third-party payment– Moral hazard

• Voluntary insurance purchase– Adverse selection

• Expenditure distribution skewed – Risk pooling necessary– Competing definitions of “fair” risk pool

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Linked Problems

• Low Value for Dollar

• Uneven quality

• Inequitable access to care

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Compared to Other Countries

• #1 in spending, share of GDP, per capita

• #37 (by WHO) on overall system performance, next to Slovenia and Costa Rica– Life expectancy, child survival, fairness,

responsiveness, health outcomes

Page 6: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Medicare Quality and Spending Correlation

Source: Baiker and Chadra, Health Affairs we, April 7, 2004

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US Overuses interventionist technological procedures

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Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Ventilator Associated Pneumonia

program

• Known how to eradicate VAP since ’99• 14 hospitals have• 6 more have made great progress

• Why hasn’t every hospital nationwide done this?

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Percent of median family income required to buy family health insurance

7.7

19

02468

101214161820

1987 2005

Source: Author’s calculations, using KFF and AHRQ premium data, CPS income data.

Page 10: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Family health insurance premium as percent of wages

17.9

22.4

33.2

26.4

33

47.8

0

5

1015

20

25

3035

40

45

50

1998 2004

MeanMedian25th percentile

Source: author’s analysis of KFF premium data, BLS wage data

Page 11: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Labor Market Realities

Occupation Family premium/Median wage

Physician 7.9%

History professor 14.8%

Secretary 30.9%

Carpenter 25.6%

Cook 50.0%

Source: KFF premium and BLS wage data, 2004.

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Premium Payments v. GDP Growth Rate

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

esigdp

Source: NIPA, BEA/Commerce Dept.

Page 13: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Employer Health Insurance Payments / Corporate Profits

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

esi/pre-tax esi/post-tax

Page 14: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Some Coverage Trends (percent of under-65 population)

1987 1993 2004

Employer 70.1% 64.3% 62.4%

Medicaid+SCHIP 8.7% 12.9% 13.4%

Uninsured 13.7% 16.0% 17.8%

Source: EBRI, December 2005.

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Result of our incremental approaches

• Health insurance as we know it is out of reach of a growing share of our workforce

• We tolerate a stunning amount of mediocre performance

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Linkages Among Problems

Cost

Quality

Access

Page 17: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Political Gridlock and Fear

• R’s don’t want real reform discussions – universal coverage threatens tax cuts (#1)– Serious cost-growth containment requires enhanced

government role

• D’s don’t know what they want– Some want to use UC to get power– Others fear and want to avoid it to get power– Others fear any solutions which unions don’t like

Page 18: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Visions of Problems

• Right:– High costs caused by moral hazard (too much insurance

coverage)– Coverage expansion will require unimaginable taxes

• Left– High costs caused by market forces, market power/high

profits, adverse selection • Center

– Problems LINKED, must be addressed simultaneously, for technical and political reasons

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Competing Policy Visions

• New Wild West, with tax breaks – Individual consumers will drive efficiency

• Musty Cocoon of Single Payer– Elite control will drive efficiency

• Brave New World– Mandates, smart regulation, combined buying power

will drive efficiency

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President’s Proposals

• Encourage non-group purchase of HSA-eligible insurance – Premium + OOP from HSAs deductible – Payroll tax credit for HSA contribution

• Support passage of AHPs + federal override of state regulation of insurance markets

• Malpractice reform• HIT and transparency exhortations

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What Do We Need?

• Political Space to Begin the Conversation– Moral case

• Proof we are all in the same community– Economic case

• Delivery system “culture of value”

• Credible policy design– 3 dimensions of credibility

• Stakeholders, politicians, people

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Health System Culture of Value • Information infrastructure to support quality improvement

• Malpractice safe harbors and value-enhancing incentives (for all)

• Comparative technology assessment as countervailing power between medical technology and coverage/use decisions– Raise the bar at the FDA– Raise the bar for procedural interventions as well

• Create Health Home, pay Host to guide us through system, teach/learn evidence base with us

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Credible Policy Design• Individual and Shared Responsibility

– Individual purchase requirement – Purchasing pool

• Risk pooling/market rules• Administrative economies of scale

– Subsidies for lower income– Financing sources

• Culture of Value– Evidence-based limits on collectively financed benefits

• Preservation of liberty and choice

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0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

ENTR SC PG Cons UP Disaff Cons D Disadv D Liberals

Pew Typology: Support for government guarantee of health insurance, even if taxes must be raised

Pew Center for Research on People & the Press: 2005

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States as Laboratories

• No inpatient coverage– Utah, West Virginia

• Limited inpatient coverage– Arkansas, New Mexico, Tennessee

• Piggyback on state’s purchasing power– West Virginia, Oklahoma

• Encourage offers within purchasing pools– Montana

• Adding Adults– Wyoming, Pennsylvania

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States as Catalysts

• Maine– Build it, capture savings, hope they’ll come

• Illinois– Cover all kids, cover all citizens?

• Vermont– Bipartisan, insurance home and subsidies for uninsured

• Massachusetts – Bipartisan, individual mandate, subsidize lower

income in smaller firms, hard budget constraint

Page 28: Health System Reform: Why Now? Why Colorado? Who’s Next? Len M. Nichols, Ph.D. Director, Health Policy Program New America Foundation Hot Issues in Health.

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Why Colorado Should Do This

• Ich Bien Ein Coloradan

• It would confound the cynics

• It would inspire the Just

• It would concentrate minds in Washington

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What Can Colorado Do Alone?

• Agree to work across party lines• Create sustainable structures

– Efficient markets– Transparent information systems– Subsidies and benefits for target population– Build in budget safeguards

• Agitate for Federal partnership