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Politics : A US National Health Care System? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (2201)10/13/2007 3:58:18 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Respond to of 42652
 
Health insurance lessons from Mass.
UNIVERSAL COVERAGE TOUGHER IN CALIFORNIA
By Mike Zapler
MediaNews Sacramento Bureau
Article Launched: 10/13/2007 01:46:14 AM PDT

SACRAMENTO - As Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative Democrats wrestle over universal health care, one overriding issue is holding up a deal: how to provide decent, affordable insurance to everyone without breaking the bank.

A state on the other coast is learning firsthand how vexing that dilemma can be.

Massachusetts captured the nation's attention last year when a Republican governor, Mitt Romney, and Democratic-dominated Legislature teamed up to pass a law they said would all but eliminate the ranks of the uninsured. The plan resembles Schwarzenegger's universal health proposal in some important ways: Both require everyone to carry insurance, make it more accessible through free or subsidized coverage for lower-income people, and penalize employers that don't provide insurance for workers.

Eighteen months later, a few things stand out about the Massachusetts experience. Roughly a third of the state's uninsured have enrolled in coverage, a group that includes some of the neediest people. At the same time, the high costs of health care already dealt one blow to the program, and skeptics say the initiative may buckle under money pressures in the coming years.

"We're covering more people, but it's not sustainable over the long haul. The law does nothing to control costs," said Alan Sager, a professor of health policy and management at Boston University. Still, he added, "Massachusetts is much better off with this law than without
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it."

About 200,000 people who were uninsured a year ago now have coverage, state officials say, a remarkable feat in the eyes of many.

"People who were uninsured and using emergency rooms for care have jumped at the chance to get health insurance," said Brian Rosman of Health Care for All, a Massachusetts advocacy group.

But all but a fraction of those who've become insured so far have signed up for free or heavily subsidized insurance. The bigger challenge - reaching those who don't qualify for government help and must buy insurance on their own - is proving more difficult.

In short, Massachusetts is struggling to reconcile the law's central tenet - a requirement that everyone in the state carry insurance - with the high, ever-growing cost of health care. That issue is at the crux of health care negotiations in California, too. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wants everyone to have to carry insurance, much like the Massachusetts plan does; Democrats say there must be some assurance it will be affordable.

But defining what's affordable, the Massachusetts experiment shows, isn't easy.

Earlier this year, officials exempted about 60,000 people (estimates of the uninsured there range from roughly 400,000 to 650,000) from the health care mandate after concluding it would eat up too much of their income. Concerns about affordability are expected to escalate in the coming months, when residents will face fines of hundreds of dollars - and, later, thousands - if they fail to buy insurance.

How people respond to that requirement could determine whether the Massachusetts effort ultimately succeeds or fails. There are also questions about whether the state will have the money to keep pace with rising insurance costs.

The state agency enforcing the health initiative has launched a full-fledged ad campaign to educate people about the law. Massachusetts residents soon will have to show proof of health insurance on their state tax returns, an idea that Schwarzenegger also has embraced.

"The theme of the ads has been to purchase health insurance because you're better off with it," said the agency's spokesman, Dick Powers. "A couple of weeks ago we started to harden that message: If you don't buy it, you'll face a penalty." "

The fine for not obtaining insurance would be about $216 this calendar year, but in subsequent years the state intends to fine people half the cost of a minimum insurance plan.

Even the insurance that officials have deemed affordable could be a stretch for many families. The "cheapest" insurance plans offered through the state program lack prescription drug coverage and include an annual deductible of $2,000 for individuals and $4,000 for families (check-ups and other preventive care are typically excluded from the deductible).

That means people with significant medical needs could be forced to spend upward of 10 percent of their income on health care. Democrats in the California Legislature, by contrast, are pushing for an out-of-pocket cap of 5 percent.

Also of concern, Massachusetts tackled health care from a much stronger position than California is in now. Only 7 percent to 10 percent of Bay State residents were uninsured at the start, compared with 18 to 20 percent here. A higher percentage of people are insured through work than is the case in California. And Massachusetts already had in place regulations on insurers that Schwarzenegger wants.

"Massachusetts faced far fewer hurdles in reforming its health care system than California does," said Carmen Balber of the Santa Monica-based Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, which is tracking Massachusetts' efforts and which says California needs to regulate insurance rates as part of any health care overhaul. "Nevertheless, as far as the affordability of health care goes, it's not working there."

But Celia Wcislo, who sits on the Massachusetts board that's implementing the law, said the panel spent many hours debating the balance between affordability and the need to insure people. Critics, she said, are premature in declaring the law a failure.

At the same time, she acknowledged that the program may be on shaky financial ground. Health care costs continue to rise at a faster clip than inflation. And the plan assumed that about 7 percent of the state's residents were uninsured - on the low end of estimates, Wcislo said.

Whatever its flaws, it's clear the Massachusetts plan already has helped tens of thousands of uninsured residents get coverage. They include people like Jim Farioli, a 61-year-old Springfield resident who lost his job as an ink technician a few years ago when his shop closed. Farioli had stopgap insurance through a federal COBRA plan, but at more than $400 a month he couldn't afford it on his $10-an-hour security guard salary.

He enrolled in Commonwealth Care, which offers virtually free care because he earns less than $15,000 a year. A few months later he was treated for a heart condition that required a four-day hospital stay. "It's a good thing I had it, or I probably would have lost my house," said Farioli.

Contact Mike Zapler at mzapler@mercurynews.com or (916) 441-4603.
mercurynews.com

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We need this????



To: Brumar89 who wrote (2201)10/13/2007 6:40:52 PM
From: average joe  Respond to of 42652
 
Canada a mecca for medical tourism?............

Out-of-country patients are a `potentially massive new industry,' says CMA head, if wait times are cut

Oct 13, 2007 04:30 AM

Joseph Hall - health reporter

Eliminating wait times in Canada's health care system would allow this country to become a mecca for medical "tourists," the president of the Canadian Medical Association said yesterday.

Controversial for his well-publicized push to bring more private investment into public health care, CMA head Dr. Brian Day also called on the government to ensure that the 30 per cent of Canadians who lack private insurance have the same access to drugs or dental care as people with extended health coverage plans.

"Consider that the biggest consumers in the $40 billion medical tourism business are Americans," Day told a meeting of the Empire Club in Toronto, referring to people who travel out of their country to seek specialized medical care.

"This is a potentially massive new industry for Canada (but) a prerequisite is the elimination of our wait times."

Day said Americans travel to far-flung places like India, Thailand and Russia for more novel or cheaper medical procedures than they can obtain in their own country.

"By changing our focus we, too, could soon tap into that market and reap the rewards for our public system," he said.

"Since Canada has virtually no non-government hospital infrastructure, the potential income from medical tourism will benefit public hospitals and unionized hospital workers. Naysayer union leaders need to reflect on this matter."

Day, the founder of a private orthopaedics clinic in Vancouver, has drawn fire from medical unions and other health groups for his advocacy of more private funding for health care in Canada.

But yesterday, Day – who says he's been called everything from "Dr. Profit" to "Darth Vader" since he took over the one-year CMA post this summer – focused more on bringing what he called "business management principles" to the funding of hospitals and other health services.

In particular, he said governments should stop funding hospitals with yearly budgets, which are eaten up bit by bit with every patient they have to treat.

Canada should follow the example of several European countries that fund hospitals on a per-patient basis, and add to a hospital's revenue every time patients visit the facility for treatment.

He said this would shorten wait times by making hospitals compete for business, which would force them to become more efficient.

Natalie Mehra, head of the Ontario Health Coalition, said the idea was fraught with danger and had not worked in jurisdictions that have tried it.

The coalition supports a one-tier, universal health system.

Mehra, who spoke at a press conference before Day's Empire Club speech, said a group of British health experts warned the CMA chief of the funding scheme's shortcomings.

In a letter she presented from the British physicians' group National Health Service Consultants, doctors warned Day it had produced "perverse" and unintended results such as an increase in hospital admissions as facilities scrambled for extra revenue.

Day said that private insurance companies already play a huge role in Canadian health care through the provision of extended care policies for drugs, ambulance rides and other medical needs.

And, he said, it was unfair that all Canadians do not share in the benefits of such plans. "What about the 30 per cent who don't (have coverage)?" Day asked.

"Hypocritically, many of those who reject the concept of private insurance have it themselves. I've never heard one of them offer to opt out of their two-tier private plan on moral grounds."

thestar.com