Quantcast
Channel: Small Business – The Health Care Blog
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 23

Healthcare Reform Even the Tea Party Could Support

$
0
0

flying cadeuciiThe Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the law of the land, and nothing the Tea Party does is likely to lead to its repeal.  But the ACA can be amended to make it less objectionable, and it wouldn’t be that hard.  We just need to modify it to allow Tea Partiers (and others) to form their own healthcare groups.

All insurance, including healthcare insurance, works by forming risk pools.  The members of the pool contribute to a pool of money which is then used to pay the claims by the members.  Most participants pay in more than they use.  In healthcare most people pay more money into the pool than the cost of the care they receive.  A few people receive far more care than they pay for.

For risk pools to work, boundaries have to be drawn around what is paid for by the risk pool.  As an example car insurance policies place a limit on how much they will pay for any one accident.  It’s nice to think that as a rich country we don’t have to draw boundaries around healthcare, that we should be able to pay for any possible medical treatment, but we can’t.  We already spend almost twice as much on healthcare as other nations and if costs keep increasing eventually it will bankrupt our country.

Many people blame private insurance companies for our expensive healthcare system, but insurers actually have very little to do with rising costs.  Instead advancing medical technology is the primary cause.  Our for-profit medical technology industry has made amazing advances in treatment and care that have allowed us to save people that used to die.  But its primary goal is still profit.  Every year the industry comes up with new procedures or refinements.  Most provide only incremental improvements in care but they all come with a higher price tag.  Every year the industry spends billions of dollars – yes, billions – successfully encouraging doctors to recommend the new procedures.  And it’s about to get much, much worse.  There is a flood of new treatments and targeted drugs getting ready to hit the market.  Some will undoubtedly be true advances, but all are likely to cost tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars per treatment.

So like it or not, health insurance needs boundaries just like auto or homeowners’ insurance.  Who draws those boundaries, of course, is one of the most contentious questions in the U.S.  Part of our country doesn’t trust insurance companies to draw acceptable boundaries.  Part of our country, including the Tea Party, doesn’t think the government should be entrusted with this authority.

The Affordable Care Act greatly expands the federal government’s role in drawing these boundaries.  At the same time the ACA makes it much harder for insurance companies to control costs.  One of the tools insurance companies used to make sure private insurance remained affordable were annual and lifetime limits on payment for care, similar to the financial limits of auto or home insurance.  The ACA forced insurance companies to remove these financial limits.  Arguably the ACA has tilted the playing field, extending government involvement while at the same time making it much harder for private insurers to keep costs down.  It is this combination that caused many people to suspect that the real purpose of the ACA was to undermine our free-market healthcare system and lay the groundwork for an eventual government take-over of healthcare.

And so the conundrum facing our country – the ACA makes it very hard for insurers to draw reasonable boundaries around covered care, and much of our population doesn’t trust the government to draw the boundaries.

There is an alternative – we could let the group members themselves do so.  We could allow individuals to come together to form their own healthcare groups, and then decide democratically how to draw the boundaries around the coverage that their healthcare pool will pay for.

In some ways this would be a radical transformation – we would actually be trusting the people receiving the care to set the limits they are willing to live with.  But the beauty of this approach is it fits easily within our existing healthcare system.  We already have an infrastructure in place comprised of underwriters, brokers, consultants, claims processors and wellness companies that help employers shape and manage employer-funded health plans.  This same infrastructure could be used by self-created and managed groups to shape and manage their plans.  And we have the legal structure in place as well – every state has some version of a mutual benefit company that could be used for self-managed health plans started by neighborhoods, political organizations or even large extended families.

Letting individuals form self-managed healthcare plans won’t immediately bring down healthcare costs, and it won’t make the decisions on how to draw the boundaries any easier.  But at least it will be the people actually receiving the care deciding on the limits they can accept.  And these decisions will have a legitimacy that neither the government nor private insurers can match – they will have the legitimacy of democracy.

Our healthcare system is already moving in the direction of self-managed groups.  Large employers are implementing private exchanges that allow their employees to select from a range of group plans.  The ACA establishes exchanges for employees of small businesses.  It’s a short step from letting the members select from a limited number of groups to letting the group members decide what their group plan should cover.  Self-managed buying groups would offer a uniquely American approach to improving healthcare in the United States, an approach that even the Tea Party could support.  We need to amend the Affordable Care Act to allow self-managed healthcare groups.

Blake is the Chief Product Officer of HealthSight, LLC, a technology company that has developed an innovative approach to using social networking and group financial transparency to engage the members of a healthcare plan

The post Healthcare Reform Even the Tea Party Could Support appeared first on The Health Care Blog.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 23

Latest Images

Trending Articles





Latest Images