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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

There Has NEVER Been a Government Health Plan That Did Not Ration Care

If passed, President Obama's proposal for a government run option will doom us all to US Government Run Health Care
 “I strongly believe that Americans should have the choice of a public health insurance option operating alongside private plans,” Obama wrote. “This will give them a better range of choices, make the health care market more competitive, and keep insurance companies honest.”
Logic dictates that a government operated health plan would be able to charge less than one operated by the private sector.  Even if all other things were equal since the government plan would not have to make a profit, the public run company would have a built-in competitive advantage.

Yesterday the President said that the government would not force a change, but of course just like they can do today, a company can force a change. Now follow the logic out, if the government plan doesn't have to make a profit, and  if all other costs are the same, it can charge less. So which way do you think companies will go? If You have a group of competitors and one has virtually unlimited resources and does not have to make a profit, how long before the competition is struggling for customers.  

Eventually you will end up with ONE insurance company named Uncle Sam.  And when your good Uncle Sam wants to save some money, he will start making bureaucratic, rather then medical decisions about your health. Mom wont get that treatment to save her life because it is expensive, or Uncle Sam will determine when to pull the plug on grandma. How am I so sure? Because there has NEVER Been a Government Health Plan That Did Not Ration Care.


Government Health Plans Always Ration Care
Europe offers a glimpse of the future if President Obama and congressional Democrats have their way.
By SCOTT GOTTLIEB

Only by expanding government control of health care can we bring down its cost. That's the faulty premise of the various proposals for health reform now being batted around Washington. The claimed cost control depends on politically safe ideas such as preventive care or the adoption of electronic health records. And neither -- even according to the Congressional Budget Office -- will do much to reduce spending.

If these proposals are implemented and fail to produce savings, government will turn to a less appealing but more familiar tool to cut costs: the regulation of access to drugs and medical services. Medicare is already going down this path. What will be new about government-run health care is the instrument of regulatory control. There will be an omnipotent federal health board. Buried in current reform proposals, this board deserves closer scrutiny.

Our best look at this construct comes from a bill released by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee. The bill calls for a "Medical Advisory Council" to determine what medical products and services are "essential benefits" and those that shouldn't be covered by a public insurance plan.

The Senate Finance Committee turns to a "Federal Health Board" to compare similar medical treatments in order to steer reimbursement to lower-cost options. Senate Finance also proposes a "sustainability commission" charged with finding automatic cuts to Medicare spending that would then pass Congress by a simple up or down vote.

Meanwhile, a draft health-care reform proposal introduced last week in the House of Representatives by the three committees with jurisdiction over health policy set up an independent "advisory committee" that will "recommend a benefit package based on standards set in the law." It also proposes a new "commission" that may, among other things, help develop treatment protocols based on government-directed research.

Congress, of course, can authorize the creation of panels and commissions to provide expert advice to the executive branch. But such bodies are typically advisory, and their advice is free to be rejected or modified by the president. Under the HELP committee's plan, the health board's recommendations would be binding unless Congress acts within a brief period to pass a "joint resolution disapproving such report in its entirety."

President Obama objects when people use the word "rationing" in regards to government-run health care. But rationing is inevitable if we simply expand government control without fixing the way health care is reimbursed so that doctors and patients become sensitive to issues of price and quality.

Like Medicare's recent decisions to curtail the use of virtual colonoscopies, certain wound-healing devices, and even a branded asthma drug, the board's decisions will be one-size-fits-all restrictions. Such restrictions don't respect variation in preferences and disease, which make costly products suitable for some even if they are wasteful when prescribed to everyone.

Moreover, these health boards prove that policy makers know they'll need to ration care but want to absolve themselves of responsibility. Some in Congress and the Obama administration recently tipped their hand on this goal by proposing to make recommendations of the current Medicare Payment Advisory Committee (MedPAC) legally binding rather than mere advice to Congress. Any new health board's mission will also expand over time, just as MedPAC's mandate grew to encompass medical practice issues not envisioned when it was created.

The idea of an omnipotent board that makes unpopular decisions on access and price isn't a new construct. It's a European import. In countries such as France and Germany, layers of bureaucracy like health boards have been specifically engineered to delay the adoption of new medical products and services, thus lowering spending.

In France, assessment of medical products is done by the Committee for the Evaluation of Medicines. Reimbursement rates are set by the National Union of Sickness Insurance Funds, a group that also negotiates pay to doctors.

In Germany, the Federal Joint Committee regulates reimbursement and restrictions on prescribing, while the Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Healthcare does formal cost-effectiveness analysis. The Social Insurance Organization, technically a part of the Federal Joint Committee, is in charge of setting prices through a defined formula that monitors doctors' prescribing behavior and sets their practice budgets. In the past 12 months, the 15 medical products and services that cleared this process spent an average 35 months under review. (The shortest review was 19 months, the longest 51.)

In short, other countries where government plays a large role in health care aren't shy about rationing. Mr. Obama's budget director has acknowledged that rationing reduces costs. Peter Orszag told Congress last year when he headed the Congressional Budget Office that spending can be "moderated" if "diffusion of existing costly services were slowed."

Medicare can already be painstakingly slow. Appealing to it takes patients an average 21 months according to a 2003 Government Accountability Office report (17 months involve administrative processing). Layers of commissions and health boards would delay access still further.

When asked to judge the constitutionality of the Senate HELP committee proposal, there's a reason why the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service said that the proposed Medical Advisory Council "raises potentially significant constitutional concerns." Our Founders thought politicians should be accountable when it comes to citizens' right to life, liberty and the pursuit of heart surgery.

3 comments:

GeronL said...

Right on. I bet this didn't come up on Charlie Gibsons infomercial.

Anonymous said...

I work in healthcare insurance. You want to spend time with me on the phones listening to people complain that "YOU" meaning me, aren't paying for little Johnnie's treatment for without it, HE WILL DIE!!!!? Or that doctors are asking for tens of thousands of dollars up front of the Missus' breast cancer surgery won't happen, because the company I work for won't pay them what they ask? Better yet, how about the Big Three saying that they won't pull out of remissing health care due to "preexisting" cause that can kill prople, like the woman who fought Ae*** for months while her cancer was growing, the insurance comapny was denying her care because her "prexisting"...was acne? I want the health care Congress has,even if expensive, because it is all paid for!! The have no huge deductables, then can get care at Bethesda Medical Center (taxpayer supported but you and I can't go there)I would rather have government de privatize health insurers, than run the whole show, but we already know most of Congress in the pockets of Ae***, BL**C****,and U**

Anonymous said...

National Healthcare (Socialist) MUST be rationed. There is simply NO way to "give" it to everyone without denying it to someone else.
That someone will be the frail elderly, handicapped, and chronically/catastrophically/terminally ill.
Hmmm...does the phrase "Life unworthy of life..." ring a bell?