Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Fixing Healthcare Part 2: The Cure The Guaranteed Healthcare Entitlement.





Virtually every other developed country has a single payer system. Everyone is covered, medical outcomes are at least as good as ours, and it costs per capita half of what we spend. Those who wish to tweak the current system or introduce things like medical savings accounts are traveling in uncharted waters with four decades of mostly failure as a legacy to build on.
That said, if we are to have a single payer system what should it look like? The following is my proposal for such a system, which restructures what we have and would, by design, bring our health care cost into line with other developed countries within a decade.
In 1992 the then commissioner of education for Rhode Island Peter McWalter proposed what he called the Guaranteed Student Entitlement.  In the program the cost of a solid education for each student would be determined.  This would cover basic subjects, electives, arts, and physical education.  The state would guarantee that each student would have this amount spent on him or her throughout the state.  Recognizing that there are students with special need, these students would get an additional stipend above the initial base stipend.  At the time the base stipend was approximately $7000 and additional funding of $1500 went to students who were either low income or had English as a second language.  They would get $3000 if they were identified with a learning disability. 
            Using this program as a model I would propose a Guaranteed Healthcare Entitlement as a comprehensive plan for the complete overhaul of the American health care system.

Coverage:  The government will pay a provider group the insurance premium for everyone living in America.  The coverage will be for a level of service, which most everyone would recognize as complete coverage.  This would include office visits, tests and procedures, hospitalization, prescription drug plan, and mental health.  There may be nominal co-pays as out of pocket expense. 

The premium:  This would be determined based on the actuarial risk of the patient.  The government might pay $1000/year for a healthy 20-year-old male and $25,000 for a blind diabetic on dialysis.
However, the average premium payment would be about $10,200/year. In addition and most importantly this average reimbursement would not increase until we moved to some fixed percentage of the industrialized per capita mean (mean plus 5-10% for instance). The cost of health care would be fixed for at least a decade. Up front then the government would know their annual healthcare costs would be $3.3 trillion which is what we currently spend on health care. Thus, like the GSE, the GHE would vary the payment for the enrollee based on their projected needs. However, despite the fact that the payments would be much more variable because the projected needs would be much more variable, the national annual cost would be known and fixed.

Cost containment:  Such a system would cost essentially the same as it is now which is still twice what other countries pay.  However, we would come into line with other countries over time simply by not increasing the premium.  Initially there would be a health care bonanza for providers.  This would give provider groups time to adapt to the new healthcare order. However, for all the reasons that the cost of health care goes up, provider groups would have to find more and more efficient ways to provide for their patients.  Once we reached our target health care costs (some percent of the OECD mean) the cost of health care could go up at the rate of that target rate.
            An additional source of savings would be to allow the federal government to negotiate drug prices.  We are paying the bill.  If we realized the saving that other developed countries do with this kind of policy we could expect an immediate saving of $130 billion annually[1]. As an offset to the drug makers, the government can help streamline bringing new drugs to market and help fund research as ways of helping such companies to continue to produce new products. 
Such a plan would, in a finite and relatively predictable period of time, bring our health care cost in line with other developed countries. In doing so, it would go a long way toward allaying the anxieties that individuals, businesses, and government all feel about the cost of our medical industrial complex.








[1] http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/pharmaceuticals/costs-and-pricing.aspx

No comments:

Post a Comment