LeadingAge : Finance Reform Task Force
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Transcript of LeadingAge : Finance Reform Task Force
LeadingAge:Finance Reform Task Force
Guiding Power Point April 19, 2013
Background Work• Reviewed implications of LTSS on: oFederal Budget oMedicaid Program
• Exploring framework and scenarios for a preferred future and “intentional” approach for LTSS
Work to DateArticulated preliminary charge:
Recommend a framework for action to help our country and its people plan for the potential need for long-term services and supports, and to reduce federal and state government obligations to meet this need.
Problem and Contributors
3. Feasibility and Sustainability of
Options including, financial, political, workforce (paid and volunteer)
4. Systems that Foster Quality and Cost-Effective Care
Over the Next 10 Years, Progressively Achieve Societal and Individual Ability to Prepare for and Meet LTSS Needs
1. Information/ Awareness Regarding LTSS
2. Meaningful Options and Willingness and Ability to Act on Them
Aligned Desired Outcomes
1. Our Country and its people have information and awareness of the need for LTSS and how to plan for those needs.
2. Our Country and its people have meaningful options for meeting LTSS needs and a willingness and ability to act on the options.
3. Options are feasible and sustainable financially, politically, and from a workforce perspective (paid and volunteer).
4. Our systems are designed and aligned to foster quality and cost-effective care.
Question Algorithm
Prefund or pay as you go?
Designated fund or general revenues? Still need safety net?
ADULTS/EVERYONE NEEDING LTSS?
Public?
Safety Net/Welfare?
For Those Most in Need (impoverished)?
For Everyone (regardless of income)?
Insurance? Other Mechanisms?
For a Hybrid Group (middle to low income)?
Hybrid? Private?
Catastrophic/ Basic/ Comprehensive/
Medicare LTC Benefit?
Participation: Mandatory/ Voluntary?
Public or privately funded? Taxes (wages, general consumption); Required contributions; Cost sharing; Premiums
Eligibility?
Concurrent Service Delivery Reforms?
Accelerated LI death benefits?
LTC Ins. Reform Pub/Private
Partnership: Asset
protection for those
who buy LTC Ins.
Tax deductions or credits for LTC
Insurance premiums
Reverse Mortgage?
Annuity that combines
retirement income LTC insurance?
Delivery reforms?
Financing reforms?
Entitlement scope?
Benefits scope?
Scope and form of benefits (service/cash)?
Delivery Reforms?
Prize Savings?
Budgetary Controls? Service caps; Spending
targets; Worker salary or service supply controls?
Shared or Individual Responsibility (0-100%)?
Forced Savings?
Federally marketed and
approved products
HSAs, 419(e) welfare benefit plans
ADMINISTRATION (Who, How, Roles and Responsibilities)
Potential ScenariosCreated four potential future scenarios for LTSS in America1. LTSS for All Adults 65+ --Government incents
behavior in private market2. LTSS for All Adults 65+--Government arranges
and pays for options and incents behavior in public/private market
3. LTSS for All (or just adults)—Government arranges for options and incents behavior
4. LTSS for All (cradle to grave)--Government arranges and pays for options and mandates behavior
Learning Agenda
Review of other countries approaches to LTSS to inform our own scenarios
Cross-Country Comparative Background
• Purpose: o Better understand the array of possible solutionso Guide solution considerations based on other
countries’ experience• Range of countries selected for different approaches
to LTC and cultural and political backgrounds• Caveat: quantitative data can vary across sources,
so some information should be viewed as “order of magnitude”
• Caveat: examples provided to show range of experiences, not as evaluation of systems
Tipping PointsMany countries debated and/or experimented with the creation of a
LTC systems for many years…
• Germany: 20-year debate, during which means-tested assistance was a large and rapidly growing financial burden on communities
• France: prolonged debate and experiments capped by heat wave of 2003
• Israel: early law in 1980 due to concerns about aging, but also inadequate home care services and burden of family care; full implementation began 1988
• Netherlands: robust 1960’s improved general welfare, but LTC services left behind
• Japan: 1960’s changes in health system and Gold Plan led to growing use of (free) hospital stays for LTC; also concern about imposing care on daughters-in-law
Comparative Lessons1. Many possibilities, no “right” answer2. Budgetary pressures are common3. Pressure for expansion of benefits 4. Design can help control costs5. Intergenerational equity a difficult challenge6. Culture matters7. Public-private interplay matters8. Interface with other systems matters9. Policy heritage matters10.Administrative structures vary, but challenges
are common
Lessons—No right answer
1. Many possibilities, no “right” answer: all countries continue to learn and evolve
• Multiple reform commissions in the U.K.• Major reform proposals under debate in
Germany• Court challenges in the Netherlands led to
five major reform proposals• Early Gold Plan in Japan scrapped for new
plan
Lesson—Fiscal 2. Budgetary pressures are common, and are
anticipated for the future
• France: participation rose from 150,000 in 2001 to 1.1 million in 2008
• Japan: higher than expected costs (20% first 5 yrs) due to higher than expected enrollment
• Netherlands: budget increased 35% in 2007• Germany: contributions for people with children
increased from 1% to 1.95% in 2009, with future rates projected in the range of 3.2% to 5.9%
Lessons—Fiscal 2. Once LTC system established:
• Public spending tends to increaseo e.g., public expenses in Germany
immediately increased from 8 to 20 million euro
• But shift in how spending is funded and/or level of government bearing costso Federal and municipal expenditures
reduced to about 1/3 of original (social assistance) spending
Lessons—Fiscal 3. Once established, there is often pressure
for expansion of benefits
• Japan: earlier Gold Plan established broad eligibility considered sacrosanct for later plan design
• Netherlands: Expectations about LTC services prompted court case, which ruled that budgetary constraints are irrelevant
• Spain: calls for reform driven in part by demand for expanded benefits
Lessons—Fiscal 3. Exception: Sweden
• Started with generous universal benefits
• Imposed stricter needs assessment• Home/residential care fell from 57%
of 80+ in 1982 to 37% in 2006
Lessons—Cost Control4. Design can help control costs
• Size of elderly population weakly correlated with costs
• High costs not synonymous with high satisfaction
• Choices about level of benefits and eligibility
• Incentives, intended or not, are important
Lessons
Age 65+2004
Age 65+2050
Age 80+2004
Age 80+2050
EU25 16.5% 29.4% 4.0% 11.0%
EU10 13.6% 29.2% 2.6% 8.7%
US 12.4% 19.7% 3.5% 7.0%
US Population generally younger than Europe
LessonsBut LTC spending dependent on more than age
Netherlands
Sweden
SpainPoland Slovakia
SloveniaGermany
Austria-NOFrance
Belgium-NOFinland
Luxembourg
Index constructed from 2007 EU survey (Eurobarometer 283), includes: worries about dependency; quality, accessibility and affordability of home and nursing care; financial preparation; excellence of professional caregivers; appropriateness of care; maltreatment of dependent elderly. Spending data source: OECD Social and Demographic Database, 2010 and OECD Health Data 2010
UK
Lessons
Lessons—Cost Control• System structure, for example:
o Limiting public costs via cost sharing such as deductibles or copayments (most countries)
o Sliding scale of benefits by income (France)o Imposing budget caps (Netherlands)o Care service supply controls, e.g., controls
on number of beds or controls on worker qualifications (Australia; Japan)
Lessons—Cost Control• Implementation, for example:
o Eligibility definitions/criteria (narrowed in Sweden, U.K.)
o Tighter targeting (Sweden) o Standardized assessments (Germany,
France, Japan)o Cost-of-living increases (Germany)o Redefined services (Japan)
Lessons—Cost Control• System structure can unintentionally
create disincentives to curb costso Spain: incentive to assess as more
severely disabledo Netherlands: regional purchasers
have limited incentive for efficiencyo Germany: disincentives for rehab
Lessons—Cost Control• Consumer incentives can also work in
opposite directions:o Cost-sharing (most countries), helps
control public costs but can risk underuse and increase acute care
o Cash options, especially that are less than the cost of services (Netherlands and Germany), can encourage efficient provision of services but also attract new recipients
Lessons—Cost ControlOOP/co-pays are common, although arrangements
vary widely, and can help frame and set expectations for public-private responsibility
• France: benefits steeply adjusted by income; beneficiaries pay all else
• Japan: users pay 10% of total costs• Germany: benefits capped; beneficiaries pay all
above cap• Netherlands: minimum monthly co-pay• Belgium: variety of OOP average about 30% of
total costs
Lessons—Cost Control
U-universal systemM-mixed systemMT-means-tested system
Data sources: OECD Health System Accounts, 2010; U.S. data from Leading Age analysis
Lessons—Cost-sharingSafety-net features remain in many
countries to help with OOP costs
• Germany: reliance on social assistance higher than expected, however total spending has been dramatically reduced (to about 1/3)
• Belgium: means-tested allowances to assist with OOP for nursing care
Lessons—Intergenerational Equity
5. Intergenerational equity is a significant challenge due to growing number of elderly• Most systems pay-as-you-go• Japan and Germany: retirees required to
contribute to system• Belgium, Netherlands: partial funding
through general taxes, broadening the base• Germany: people without children pay higher
contribution rate—recognizing value of informal care
Lessons—Culture6. Culture matters
• Western Europe, in general, regards dependency as a social risk
• Scandinavia: strong tradition of universalism and equality; state cares for dependents
• Japan: desire to reduce reliance on daughter-in-law as caregiver
• Germany: desire to support family care
Lessons–Culture
Source: 2007 Eurobarometer survey
Lessons—Culture
Source: 2007 Eurobarometer survey
Lessons—Public/Private
7. Private insurance markets are highly dependent on public systems
• Products and markets emerge to complement public insurance (Germany, France)
• Large system in Israel marketed with health insurance
• Size of private markets also dependent on extensiveness (Netherlands decided private insurance would not work)
• Markets also dependent on predictability of public system (growth in French market slowing)
Lessons—Public/Private
7. The establishment of public systems can also help create new markets for long-term care services
• Belgium: “service checks” helped regularize services otherwise performed in black market
• Israel: greatly expanded home care services, especial in private sector
• Germany: expansion of capacity for home and institutional services
Lessons—Interdependencies
8. Interface with other systems matters
• Italy: LTC benefits unofficially used to support low-income families lacking other income supports such as UI
• Germany: reforms in social security and UI pushed costs onto LTCI
• Japan: free health care led to high use of “social beds” among elderly
Lessons—Heritage9. Policy heritage matters
• Japan: Gold Plan set standard for eligibility• Netherlands: expanding health insurance
to cover LTC not considered possible at time• Israel: goal was to complement existing
(limited) system• France, Germany, Austria: children
financially liable for care of parents
Lessons—Administration
10. While administrative structures vary, they are a common source of challenges
• Netherlands: dissatisfaction with regional purchasing
• Belgium: coordination between levels of government a major concern
• Sweden: looking to private market to provide more consumer choice
• Spain and Sweden: reliance on local assessments for eligibility has created disparities and inefficiencies
Lessons—What is our “system” in the US?
• Mixed system of health (Medicare) and means-tested health and other services (Medicaid)
• Medicaid, the primary payor, varies by state• Not managed as a social risk (unlike retirement or
unemployment)• Expectation that individuals will prepare financially,
e.g., through purchasing LTCI or savings• Yet 70% of expenditures are funded by public sources• Minimal take up of private insurance• Heavy reliance on informal care, but minimal
systemic support of caregivers
Possible reflections for US system design
• What assets—cultural, policy, or service infrastructure-- do we want to build on?
• What outcomes should most drive the system design– including undesirable outcomes in the current system we want to change and desirable outcomes we are failing to realize?
• What risks are appropriate for the public to bear, and which should individuals bear?
• How much room for error can we tolerate in spending estimates?
• How can we design a system that enables continuous improvement and reform?
• How do we build a system that recognizes that in any system, needs for LTSS will grow and so will spending on LTC?
Understanding LTSS Spending:
Part of defining problem & solutions
Defining LTSS by type of functional limitation (2004-2006): $151B
“long-term care in the United States is needed by 10.9 million community residents [people with ADL and or IADL needs], half of them non-elderly, and 1.8 million nursing home residents, predominantly elderly.”
Source: Kaye, Harrington & LaPlante; 2010
Recent counts from adding up services (2010-2011): $208B-$813B
• Need unduplicated counts
• But also “appropriately” inclusive
• Need apples to apples approach for comparisons (e.g., international or %GDP)
Source: LeadingAge, review of literature and analysis of national data sets; 2013
LTSS encompasses a broad range of services and special
environmentsFrom National Health
Expenditure Accounts and Related unduplicated & in GDP: $363B (2011)- 2% of GDP
Some Other Costs/Spending• Estimate of value of non-paid
family care-giving ($450B)-Not in GDP
• Senior/Other housing (not on left): “independent living,” not part of CCRCso Private homes owned by
any older people or those with disabilities
o Rental units (with/wo public housing subsidies) for special populations
Home Health20%
Nursing Homes
30%
CCRCs/AL with on-site Nursing
12%
AL/Homes for the Aged
without Nursing
4%
Other group homes,
personal care and
other services
34%
The federal government pays for 49% of
LTSS, but states control programs
accounting for 45% of the $$ (increasingly
delegated to private managed care organizations)
By Source of Funds: Total = $363B
By Program: Total = $363B
Private In-surance
6%
Private Other24%
Medicare21%
Non-Medicaid Other Federal
4%
Medicaid-all40%
Other State/Local5%
State & Local21%
Private30%
Federal49%
Public LTSS Spending (2005)Per Capita , age 65+In US dollars (graph)
Total US health expenditures are nearly double those of many OECD countries, but public spending on
LTSS is more similar in amount (shown on
graph), though other countries cover more of
aged by public LTSS payments (below)
Japan = 14% (of age 65+ receive publicly-paid LTSS
services)Germany = 11%
U.S. = 5%
Source: Creighton, Ikegami & Gibson; 2010
United
State
sJap
an
German
y0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
InstitutionalHome CareCash