Let's Talk Health Care

Mass. Health Care Reform - A National Model?

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I get asked this question a lot these days, which shouldn’t be that surprising.  Harvard Pilgrim is headquartered in Massachusetts, and the Massachusetts health care reform plan is already a couple of years old.  More importantly, it has added about 440,000 people to the insured ranks (185,000 through unsubsidized private plans and another 255,000 through subsidized, Medicaid-like coverage), has maintained high employer participation (over 70%) and doesn’t appear to be crowding out private coverage as public coverage expands.

But my answer to this question remains “it depends.”  There were profound differences between Massachusetts and the rest of the country before health care reform took center stage here that make relying on our experience somewhat challenging for the nation as a whole.  For example, Massachusetts already had guaranteed-issue requirements for individual health insurance coverage even before reform.  Today, most states don’t.  So in Massachusetts, individual coverage was available to anyone who wanted to buy it, but it was really, really expensive.  That’s because most of the people who buy individual coverage - absent a mandate to purchase - usually plan to use health care services once they purchase the insurance.  Insurance works through risk pooling - a small number of people who get sick spend the premiums paid by a much larger group of people who don’t.  If most of the people who buy the product plan to use it, there’s not enough healthy people to keep the overall price down.

When the state merged the individual health insurance market with the small group health insurance market (businesses with 1-50 employees) as part of its reform efforts, prices for individual coverage went down by 25% (on a per capita basis, individuals spend a lot more on health care than small business employees - hence the big drop in price for the individuals when they got mushed together with all the small business employees).  At the same time, small group prices went up by 2 percent to pay for including the cost of all those individual purchasers in their risk pool.  This was mostly missed during the implementation of reform, because medical expense trends went up by 10% over the same period of time, shielding the shift in expenses from individuals to small group.

In addition, most other states permit medically underwritten individual insurance - which weeds out people seeking to purchase coverage who might be high risk enrollees.  They either get denied coverage, or shifted to a high risk pool for high risk enrollees.  As a result, individual insurance in many states is very, very inexpensive for those who can access and purchase coverage.  Any national move to guarantee issue individual coverage - even with a mandate to buy - virtually assures that these people - and there are millions of them throughout the country - will pay a lot more for their health insurance coverage than they pay now.  This is exactly the opposite of what happened when reform was passed in Massachusetts, and needless to say, this would make all those folks who have individual insurance now very unhappy.

Massachusetts also heavily regulated the small group health insurance market before reform, using rating  rules that capped how far apart the prices for expensive and inexpensive (relatively speaking) products could be, and prohibiting medical underwriting in the small group market.  Today, most states allow significantly more flexibility than MA did before reform, and the MA rules today are even more restrictive than they were before reform.

While some might argue that bringing other states into line with Massachusetts’ standards could be more equitable to consumers and small business, there’s no doubt that big changes in how individual and small group products can be grouped, rated and priced will create millions of winners and millions of losers - at least in the short term.  Winners don’t always notice the gain, because it usually gets lost in the noise (and doesn’t always translate into a big drop in price overall - just less of an increase), but the losers almost always notice they’ve been hit with a huge increase - and they don’t like it.

Third, Massachusetts had a declining population, a tight labor market, high per capita income, and relatively rich plan designs in its public and private health insurance programs to begin with.  Our unemployment rate has been below the national average for the past couple of years, but not because we’ve been creating new jobs faster than the nation overall.  It’s because our working population has been shrinking for years, making it easier for the state’s economy to appear to be relatively healthy compared to its peers.  As a result, employers have been looking for people more than people have been looking for work.  This “buyer’s market” has combined with a pretty high minimum coverage requirement to create a rich plan design as the so-called “basic” plan in Massachusetts.  Installing this ”basic” plan design nationally would be a huge step up from where most commercial insurance plans in other parts of the country are today.  Huge.

Fourth, state government was already making significant - and calculable - investments in paying for hospital-based services provided to people in Massachusetts who did not have insurance.  It was worth about $1 billion, and was funded by a combination of assessments on health plans and providers, money from the state itself, and federal reimbursements through a Medicaid waiver.  There is no calculation anywhere at the national level that could possibly help people understand what the “savings” from getting everyone covered might be to the system overall.  Moreover, because Massachusetts already had so much money “in the game” so to speak, the Commonwealth did not have to raise taxes (much) to make the prospect of universal coverage a reality.  I would think this trick will be much harder to pull off at the federal level.

Fifth, Massachusetts raised Medicaid payments to hospitals and physicians as part of the reform initiative by a lot - $270 MM over three years.  That’s a 3-5% increase on top of regular inflation, plus or minus.  Duplicating this kind of positive incentive to support reform among providers at the federal level will be hard to do.

Finally, the health care cost problem wasn’t addressed by the MA health care reform plan.  In fact, a recent post on the Health Care For All blog argues that the decision to ignore the cost question made reform possible.  ”The main critique is that the (reform) plan over-regulates and does not do enough to control spending.  One of the lessons we drew from Massachusetts health reform is that coverage expansions, as hard as they are, are easier than serious cost control.  Massachusetts wisely decided not to hold coverage hostage to the difficult decisions about cost.  In fact, expanding coverage increases the pressure to do something about costs, pressure that wouldn’t exist without the expansion.”

It’s also worth noting that Massachusetts enacted almost $800 MM in new taxes as part of its FY 2009 budget to fund, among other things, the third year of health care reform.  This has not been a free ride financially, and won’t be going forward.  In addition, the financial meltdown of the past three months only makes the state’s fiscal situation worse.

It’s hard for me to see how the federal government, given the enormous structural deficits staring policymakers straight in the face as far as the eye can see, can ignore the cost question as it pursues coverage expansion.  In fact, most serious analysts of federal finances say health care reform HAS to do something about health care cost growth generally and Medicaid and Medicare cost growth in particular - or it simply takes a terrible situation and makes it even worse.

So what should the feds do?  I suggest the following:

1) Reform the way Medicare pays for services.  Over time, no single reform will mean more to the cost and quality of health care in this country than this one.  Medicare drives everything else.  Change Medicare, and you change the system.  It’s as simple as that.  The fact that almost everyone who studies the health care system in this country knows this is true - but it doesn’t happen - illustrates how hard it is to do.

2) Fix the insane operating and financial relationship that exists between Medicare and Medicaid for low income seniors who qualify for both programs.  This is a huge opportunity to reduce costs and improve health care quality for a very vulnerable population that’s deeply involved in the health care system.

3) Use federal matching funds from Medicaid and S-CHIP to encourage states to expand coverage for those populations that can’t access coverage through work, but don’t currently qualify for Medicaid.  The role of federal Medicaid funds in encouraging the MA expansion was paramount.  Without the threat of losing existing federal Medicaid funds if nothing got done, the reform plan wouldn’t have happened.

4) Combine guarantee issue in the individual market with an individual mandate to buy coverage.  Use soft, escalating financial penalties to encourage people to buy coverage - maybe as take-up rates associated with Medicaid and S-CHIP expansions kick in - to encourage everyone - including healthy youngsters - to purchase coverage.  Remember, if you don’t bring in the healthy people, all guarantee issue will do is raise prices for everyone who’s already got coverage in the individual market.  On this one, Senator Clinton was right.

5) Define a minimum benefit plan design - which needs to be a minimum - not a maximum - and consider tying that standard to the federal tax deduction.  But if the minimum ends up looking like what’s minimum in Massachusetts, that’s an enormous increase in costs and coverage requirements for the vast majority of the employed population in this country.  That would be a bad idea.

Whether or not the federal government would need a Connector or an Exchange to do this is at least debateable.  If there’s a minimum benefit standard, guaranteed issue, and a mandate to buy, I’m not sure why the federal government needs to set up shop as a seller/buyer/intermediary.  In Massachusetts, the Connector is spending more time regulating and overseeing the individual and small group market and managing the Medicaid-like Commonwealth Care program than it is spending selling private insurance.  Plans can and do sell directly to individuals and small businesses - using products and market rules and standards that have been certified and approved by the Connector.  But the Connector is not the preferred channel for buyers - so far anyway.

All in all, my big hope is that the federal government will do something on health care.  It’s too big a player with too much influence and too much at stake to sit idly by and perpetuate the status quo.  But as has been the case before on health care, there’s the talk of reform - and then there’s the walk.  I’m hoping for the walk.

8 CommentsFollow responses through the RSS feed

  1. sean grady Says

    Charlie - Can you break down your math on the 440,000 people added to the insured ranks? According to the Connector web site they have enrolled 162,726 people in Commonwealth Care which I think is pretty much “free” to everyone making up to 300% of the federal poverty limit. Another 19,247 are enrolled in Commonwealth Choice where I think members do pay a premium of around $200 per month for an individual policy. Also, overall state Medicaid enrollment was up to 1,145,185 as of March ‘08 and those members are also “free”. Are the 185,000 unsubsidized people you mention being counted as people picking up coverage via their employer or something else? The way I see it is looks like at least a quarter million people were added via “free” programs like Commonwealth Care and Medicaid which comes at an enormous cost that is being supported largely by the federal government with taxpayer dollars and I seriously doubt if this could be financially viable as a national model.

  2. Charlie Baker Says

    Sean — The 255,000 enrolled in either Commonwealth Care or Medicaid (hence my reference to their coverage as “Medicaid-lite” type plans). The 100,000+ who picked up private coverage includes those folks who took coverage through their employers who previously hadn’t.

  3. Brian Marchant-Calsyn Says

    Charlie,
    Great job on explaining why MA reform worked and the national challenges a comparable attack would face. It was technical enough to be thorough and layman enough to be understood by the masses.

    It seems that differences in other states could be handled by legislators, on a federal or state level. Do you agree?

    You make some very good points on issues that the eventual reform will have to address. At the same time, as an accomplished health insurance executive I wonder if your view of the possible solutions, while certainly from a knowledgeable position, aren’t unintentionally biased. While you run a respected and award winning plan, you’ve also been entrenched in the industry for a long time.

    Isn’t there room for a dramatic paradigm shift in healthcare coverage at least partially developed by industry outsiders? I guess what I’m looking for is a description of what you would recommend if you were in Tom Daschle’s position instead of CEO of one of the top health insurance plans.
    Brian Marchant-Calsyn

  4. David Donohue Says

    Charlie,

    I just finished reading Critical by Tom Daschle. I’m interested on your thoughts for his plan to roll out a Federal Health Board.

    I was also interested in the fact that a few times in the book he mentions limiting/restricting marketing by insurers and others. This is politically popular, but possibly too restrictive of business practices.

  5. Rafe Says

    Hi Charlie,

    First, your blog is fantastic. Substantive and well written, and the comments tend to be well-informed and thought provoking too. A good culture all around.

    Second, I’m doing some research on Mass. Health Care Reform and have a couple questions for you about the impact of the law on insurance carriers like Harvard Pilgrim:

    a) I read somewhere that the cost trend rate for CommCare and CommChoice has been north of 10%. Is that accurate? And how does that compare to the cost trend rate for commercial plans generally in Mass.?

    b) What have the expense and loss ratios been for the CommChoice plans as a whole? Similar to typical plans, worse, better?

    c) Also, just curious: Why has spending on the Health Safety Net only gone down by about 40% if the ranks of the uninsured in Mass. have plummeted by about 70?

    Thank you very much and Happy New Year!

    –rafe

  6. Mike Kovner Says

    Charlie -

    I’d love to read your comments on the Nov 24, 2008 Brian Klepper article about Small Group coverage issues and the accompanying letter from John Sinibaldi.

    Would the problems facing John’s Florida clients be different in Massachusetts?

    http://healthcommentary.org/public/blog/218833

  7. Charlie Baker Says

    David - There is no single point of accountability for health care services at the federal level. Responsibility for paying for and/or regulating health care services and healh insurance is spread across several Secretariats and Agencies. Daschle’s notion of a single point of accountability is worth consideration. That said, the “Fed model” he suggests doesn’t look that great these days, since the Fed oversees our banking and financial system, which, as you know, is not in great shape at the moment.
    Rafe - Three really good questions, and I suggest to you ask the folks at the MA Connector Authority for the answers. They oversee all the areas you’re interested in, and would be the ones most likely to able to answer your questions. My incomplete answer - since it would be based on only HPHC’s experience - is that merging non-group and small group was expensive for health plans and for the small groups we insure, and that merger has negatively affected the financial performance of the small group market overall. Someone from the Commonwealth would also have to answer your question about the Safety Net and the newly insured.
    Mike - Three uninformed comments about Florida. First, the underlying rise in health care costs is the fundamental problem in every health insurance market. It’s where 80-90% of the money goes. Second, Florida has a guarantee issue small group market - so anyone who wants to buy, can - whenever they want to (like right before they plan to use services). Third, Florida has the odd combination of medically underwritten individual policies, which peels healthy people out of the small group market, and some plan design and rating rules that further separate the least expensive from the most expensive. Put it all together and prices in small group rise overall, healthy people either buy in the individual market or not at all, and the only people who are left in the small group are heavy users. That translates into higher prices, which reduces participation among healthier enrollees, which raises costs overall, etc. Over time, the market gets smaller and more expensive, and the only people buying are big spenders. Not a pretty picture.

  8. Brian Marchant-Calsyn Says

    Great dialogue and reasoning Charlie. Thank you also for your posts on restraint when it comes to over zealous healthcare IT initiatives and blank checks.
    Brian Marchant-Calsyn

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