Archive for the ‘affordability’ Category

The Future of Health Care

Friday, September 17th, 2010

How are we going to change the cost curve in health care and provide the highest quality of care? Dr. Bob Master – one of the country’s leading health care visionaries – has a great answer.

Six years ago, Bob came to Community Catalyst as a fellow of the Institute of Medicine as a Profession. Our idea was that he would use the fellowship to incubate a care delivery system that would serve Massachusetts’ most vulnerable people, including frail older adults with chronic conditions, people with significant physical disabilities and people who are dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare. By focusing on primary care and prevention, this system would deliver high quality care and reduce costs.

After two years at Community Catalyst, Bob launched the Commonwealth Care Alliance (CCA) upstairs from our offices on 30 Winter Street. We wanted to ground CCA closely to consumers, so Health Care For All and the Boston Independent Living Center became CCA’s corporate members and I became president of the board.

Six years later, Bob and his committed staff at CCA have created a comprehensive system of care that not only improves their members’ health, but also has been proven to lower costs by keeping people out of the hospital and out of nursing homes. Last year, NCQA, widely viewed as a national leader in driving healthcare improvement and quality, honored Bob for his efforts to successfully reform health care delivery by improving quality and reducing cost for Medicare and Medicaid Patients.

Recently, WBUR’s (Boston’s National Public Radio affiliate) CommonHealth blog ran a nice piece on Bob and CCA. So what does CCA’S care model look like? Here’s how the WBUR bloggers describe it:

The organization is essentially a full-service provider of medical care and social support for chronically sick, elderly and sometimes disabled people on Medicare, Medicaid, or both. From the moment a patient signs on, he or she has access — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week — to a nurse practitioner who is armed with up-to-date electronic medical records and has the authority to call in other specialists as needed. Patients can choose from 25 primary care sites around the state, and for the homebound, house calls are also part of the plan. For those who need to get to the hospital, Commonwealth Care contracts with 8 hospitals in the state, but will only use providers who agree to Medicare reimbursement rates.

Continuity of care is essential. So the program offers non-traditional assistance to patients at no extra cost, including transportation to medical appointments and help with daily chores and activities. Commonwealth Care tries to rescue patients from the kind of fragmented, procedure-driven care that can leave them feeling like “an anonymous piece of baggage on a never ending airport conveyor belt, always tagged for the wrong destination,” as one senior put it.

This is precisely the kind of care that Community Catalyst and our partners at the Campaign for Better Care are pursuing as the Campaign works to implement the delivery and payment reform provisions of the new health law in ways that benefit older adults and their families.

Community Catalyst is proud to be able to highlight the good work at CCA, and we encourage Hub readers to get to know them better. To paraphrase an old saying, “We’ve seen the future of health care, and it is CCA.”

– Robert Restuccia, Executive Director

Insurance-palooza – the NAIC National Meeting in Seattle

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

The Summer 2010 Meeting of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) in Seattle Washington wrapped up last week. For those of us not lucky enough to spend a long summer weekend with a group of insurance commissioners, some friends of Community Catalyst provided the inside scoop on the meeting.

Victory on Medical Loss Ratios. The Executive Committee of the NAIC approved the medical loss ratio recommendation made by the subcommittee on this issue. In spite of receiving a lot of pressure from insurers, brokers and other industries, the Commissioners stayed the course and remained respectful of NAIC process by voting yes on the recommendation, with very few changes.  Thanks to the consumer representatives on the NAIC, who have worked for months to ensure the MLR definition is based on actual medical costs and evidence-based quality improvement efforts. And, thanks to advocates to who called their Insurance Commissioners about this issue. This is good news – and we expect HHS to accept the NAIC’s recommendation.  What this means for advocates: This is a procedural win that is gets us closer to a tool to fight unwarranted premium increases and get consumers better value for their insurance dollars. It also demonstrates that we need to monitor these decisions and make our voices heard as necessary to ensure consumers are protected.

Brokers feel the love. In a bizarre turn of events, the NAIC spent their summer weekend drafting an “ode to brokers.” The resolution, sponsored by a number of Insurance Commissioners, expressed support for the work that brokers do for the insurance market.  A clause in this resolution suggests that brokers should be favored as Navigators, the entities that will help to explain and enroll people in coverage and plans through the Exchange starting in 2014. This is inconsistent with the intent of the ACA, which clearly lists potential Navigators as “trade, industry, and professional associations, commercial fishing industry organizations, ranching and farming organizations, community and consumer-focused non-profit groups, chambers of commerce, unions, small business development centers, other licensed insurance agents and brokers, and other entities.” (Section 1311(i)). It is unclear what weight this NAIC resolution holds.  But one thing is certain: brokers were flexing their muscles in Seattle, and many Commissioners were impressed. What this means for advocates: We need to educate Insurance Commissioners and others in state government about the importance of community-based groups in providing public education, health plan information, and enrollment assistance, other critical roles of Navigators.

Everyone’s thinking about Exchanges. NAIC created a tentative workplan for the subgroup charged with working on Exchanges. They are dividing into 14 smaller workgroups (leads should be posted on the NAIC website soon).  But we hear that one of the subgroups will work on a “skeleton” model law for states, which will basically track the statutory requirements and no more. Other subgroups are likely to respond to HHS’s request for recommendations on (1) network adequacy, (2) marketing standards and (3) quality measures.  Another group will tackle “principles and priorities” on a number of other big exchange topics such as governance and operations. (TBD). Another high-level liaison group will work with state Medicaid heads on plans for collaboration. What this means for advocates: The NAIC may have helpful resources as states begin to design Exchanges.  More to come.

– Lastly, though not specific to NAIC, rate review grant announcements were also made last week. A number of Insurance Commissioners talked about using the funds to increase consumer involvement in the process and get more information out to public. What this means for advocates: If your state applied for and received a grant to increase rate review, now is the time to work with your Commissioner on a plan to increase consumer involvement in the premium oversight process.

– Christine Barber, Senior Policy Analyst

“Show me” gender equity!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Missouri is trying to remain true to its slogan, the “Show Me State,” by helping lead the charge in anti-health reform legislation prohibiting abortion services for health insurance obtained through the exchange – (the term used for the health care insurance marketplace instituted by national health reform).  Yet it certainly leaves one wondering…show me what?

Now sitting on Governor’s desk is a bill that strips the state exchange of offering any kind of abortion coverage to consumers– even through an optional rider.  Similar to the flurry of anti-reform constitutional amendments being adopted across many states, this legislation is based on a model developed by the Americans United for Life (AUL), a non-profit law and policy group.  The model, entitled “The Federal Abortion-Mandate Opt-Out Act,” is in the pipeline in almost 30 states, according to AUL.  Thus far, Mississippi, Arizona, Tennessee and Louisiana have passed the prohibition measure – the measure was vetoed in Oklahoma and Florida.

Claiming to be founded upon a pro-family platform, AUL aspires to stall the progress of health care reform by barring consumers from some patient services.  Yet eliminating family planning services from exchanges does not promote a family friendly policy environment – but supporting gender equity does.  According to the National Law Center for Women, 17 percent of Missouri women forgo needed care due to their higher cost of health care – these include a broad range of services.  Women in Missouri are, on average, poorer than men and tend to work for small businesses that do not offer health coverage.  This is not only a strain on women and their health but also their families.

Advocates can challenge these flawed attempts to dismantle health reform and propose a broader pro-family agenda by driving home the message of gender equity.   A pro-family message is one that encompasses supporting all women at all times in their lives – daughters, sisters, wives, mothers, and grandmothers alike.  Other states have stepped up to rid their health care systems of inequitable gender rating that charge women as much as 4-48 percent more than men for the same health care policy.

However, these positive steps are not without their critics.  Before Colorado passed its ban on gender rating in the individual market this past spring (in the week following health reform passage), an insurance underwriter commented to the legislature that perhaps “we should ‘blame God’ because men’s parts were on the outside and women’s parts were on the inside.”  State Senator Morgan Carroll responded to his comment by suggesting “perhaps his brain is on the outside.”  Further, Rep. Jim Kerr suggested that women enjoyed shopping and perhaps they should do a better job shopping for health insurance.

The absurdity of the discussion makes you laugh and grimace simultaneously – but the issue remains in play in many states.  Women are often the center of their families, before and after they procreate – a real pro-family policy would be for all to acknowledge their right to a healthy and long life.  So, show me gender equity!

–Eva Marie Stahl, policy consultant

The Insider: All this could be yours someday

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Fuzzy logic
As the “tax extenders” bill makes its way through the Senate, a provision to extend COBRA premium subsidies for the unemployed is in jeopardy. Opponents in the Senate and the Blue Dogs in the House who stripped the provision from legislation two weeks ago argue that it’s unfair to help people who are unemployed when other, equally needy people are getting no assistance.

Just stop and think about that for a minute: It’s not like they’re identifying an alternative beneficiary for assistance, or arguing to accelerate implementation of the Affordable Care Act. They are basically saying, “Because we can’t help everybody, we won’t help anybody.” If you apply that reasoning more broadly it leads you to advocate the repeal, or at least the suspension, of Medicare and Medicaid until 2014, when financial assistance to obtain coverage becomes more generally available–a move few Congressmembers would dare consider, even in a non-election year.

With unemployment remaining high, the COBRA premium subsidies in limbo are badly needed. They are good for the economy, the health care system, and mostly for the thousands of struggling families who will be able to retain their coverage. Find out more at Community Catalyst’s implementation headquarters.

Faulkner on health care
When William Faulkner wrote, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past,” he could have been talking about the politics of health care more than a half-century into the future. Congressional Republicans’ challenge of the White House public education campaign on Medicare changes as misuse of government funds for partisan advantage hearkens back to Democrats’ attacks on the Bush administration over the original Medicare Part D roll-out.

And Senators who opposed PPACA seem intent on re-debating the legislation at every opportunity: first, in the context of Don Berwick’s nomination to head CMS, and now in the debate over the Medicare physician payment fix. Republicans have offered an alternative that does more for the physicians but partially pays for it by eliminating desperately-needed financial assistance for state Medicaid programs—while slipping in a “poison pill” that would roll back the individual responsibility provisions in PPACA. Such a move could appeal to many on the left who are concerned that the affordability provisions don’t go far enough.

Someday, all this could be yours
As the “repeal and replace” drumbeat goes on, a third ‘r’ should be added to the sequence: Recycle. Congressional Republicans are recycling ideas from the debate that were shown to fail to reduce the number of uninsured or eliminate insurance discrimination.

But as several states move forward with anti-Affordable Care Act ballot measures, new research from Massachusetts shows just how wrongheaded such opposition is. Until the coverage provisions of the Affordable Care Act kick in in 2014, Massachusetts provides the closest thing we have to a “beta site” for what the health care system of tomorrow will look like. While critics focus on the continuing cost challenges (problems that pre-dated health reform in Massachusetts  and were not really addressed in the landmark law in 2006) new reports published by the Urban Institute and the National Bureau of Economic Research underscore just what other states can gain as they move forward with implementing the law.

Urban’s latest report shows that the coverage gap between racial and ethnic minorities and non-Hispanic whites has been closed—the only place in the country where this is true. Additional findings show:

  • –high rates of coverage in Massachusetts persist despite continued high unemployment
  • –economic barriers to obtaining care remain low and have declined further for some populations since the inception of the law
  • –four years into implementation, there is still no evidence of ‘crowd-out’ of private coverage, and public support for the Massachusetts system remains high.

Get the details here (pdf).

The NBER paper found that since reform in Massachusetts, there have been fewer preventable hospitalizations and emergency room-generated admissions, and length of hospital stays has been reduced, most likely due to improvements in access to ambulatory care.

Sure makes implementation look like a lot better idea than repeal.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

Senate should restore COBRA and Medicaid subsidies

Friday, June 4th, 2010

As we said Tuesday, the House removed provisions for federal Medicaid and COBRA subsidies from H.R. 4213, and the Senate departed for Memorial Day recess without taking action. The subsidies are critical to help hurting states that are struggling with budget cuts and families who have lost jobs during the worst economic time since the Depression.

The Senate will take up the bill when it returns from recess, and is likely to make changes. It is critical that the FMAP and COBRA extensions are put back into the baseline bill that is brought to the Senate floor, since it’s difficult to add the provisions back in through a floor amendment.

States are relying heavily on the FMAP extensions in their state budgets. It is very possible that this will be the last chance to secure those funds. Please contact your Senators before Tuesday and ask them to support the inclusion of the FMAP and COBRA extensions in the “tax extenders” bill (Also known as H.R. 4213, “The American Jobs, Closing Tax Loopholes and Preventing Outsourcing Act.”) to be considered by the Senate.  You can use Families USA’s toll-free number to connect to Capitol Hill, 1-866-922-4970.

For talking points, see the Community Catalyst implementation page.


The Point

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

While we were encouraging folks to write letters to local newspapers, telling stories about what health care reform means for people they know, we realized each of us here knows someone who would be helped by health reform passing.  Who reminds us that words like premium subsidy, out-of-pocket maximums and minimum benefit standards actually stand for other words: friend, parent, child, colleague.

So this week we begin to share why we’ve been drinking so much office coffee this past year, and spending more time connecting with the Congressional switchboard than with our families.

The first story is from Ann Rudy, a field coordinator here.

My mom, who is 60, works as a hairdresser in Texas. Her employer does not offer insurance to employees so my mom and her husband, who is self-employed, purchased policies on the individual market.  She has worked since she was 16 and has always been healthy.  Like many without an affordable insurance option, she rolled the dice when she purchased a high-deductible plan.  Unfortunately, she lost.

Several months later, my mother fell. By the end of the day, she was in pain and was having trouble moving one of her legs.  She thought she could ‘walk it off,’ but eventually she went to the ER in pain. She had shattered her hip.  After major surgery and a hospital stay, my mom is now chipping away at her $10,000 credit card bill.

National health reform could prevent this from happening to others, or to my mom again. Small businesses like my mom’s salon would get tax credits for offering insurance to their employees. And if they didn’t offer an affordable insurance option, she would be able to shop for a plan in the insurance Exchange, where companies would be required to make clear what a plan covers and how much it costs. (In Texas and other states, no such requirement exists right now.) My mom might have qualified for new subsidies to help with her premium and out-of-pocket costs. And new rules in the federal bills would set limits on out-of-pocket expenses, so someone who falls sick—or a healthy person who takes a fall—would never be asked to pay $10,000 of her medical costs from her paycheck, or on her credit card.


If you have a story to share about how health care reform matters to you, please email us at hub@communitycatalyst.org.

The Health Reform Insider

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

“Health reform is on life support unfortunately”Sen. Mary Landrieu

“The lady doth protest too much, methinks”—Gertrude in Hamlet

“Reports of my demise are greatly exaggerated”—Mark Twain

A lot of ink has been spilled over repeated pronouncements of those declaring health care reform dead, or nearly so. The fact that they have to assert it over and over suggests a) that they would like it to be true and b) that it’s not.

In mulling the new Congressional math coming out of the surprising victory of Massachusetts State Senator Scott Brown in the special election to replace Ted Kennedy, it’s useful to remember that the votes of neither the conservative Senate Democrats nor the ultra-conservative House Republicans who dominate the doom and gloom set are expected or needed for final passage.

Passing the Senate-approved bill in the House alongside a reconciliation bill containing the key amendments negotiated by Congressional leaders and the Obama administration prior to the Brown election offers a clear opportunity to enact almost the same bill that would have been enacted before the election. Indeed, it’s the only opportunity to pass a comprehensive bill in the near future. There are signs that both the House and Senate leadership are pursuing this path and that the votes are there in each chamber, at least in theory.

This can be done. There is no insurmountable obstacle to moving forward and there’s a compelling case to be made, both politically and policy-wise, for doing so. After a period of uncertainty, leaders in both branches and the administration (for the most part) appear to have reached that same conclusion.

That said, there is still no guarantee of success, and there are several significant hurdles to clear before a signing ceremony.

Hurdle one: Policy and politics
The first obstacle is getting agreement on the elements that could pass as part of a reconciliation bill to accompany the Senate language. Key provisions of the agreement negotiated just before the Brown election included removing special treatment for the Nebraska Medicaid program, increasing affordability protections for low- and moderate-income families, closing the Medicare Part D “doughnut hole,” making changes to the Senate plan to impose an excise tax on high-cost health insurance and increasing federal oversight of health insurance Exchanges.

Most of these elements could be included in a reconciliation bill, though it’s unclear whether or to what extent changes in the Exchanges would pass muster, since any provision passed via reconciliation must have more than an incidental effect on the federal budget. There is also a push to reopen the negotiations to revisit yet again the excise tax on high-cost health plans and the public option.

The excise tax: Once more, with feeling
Taxing high-cost health plans has been one of the most contentious issues throughout the debate. Although some significant changes were negotiated in the Senate plan that won labor backing, many in the House are calling for that deal to be reopened and for the tax to be dropped altogether. Some fear that one of the changes, a special temporary exemption for plans negotiated through collective bargaining, will look like one more special interest deal. House members raise a number of both policy and political concerns, so here is a review of the issues at stake.

Pro
The current tax exemption of employer-sponsored health benefits provides a disproportionate benefit to the wealthiest households and nothing for the predominantly low-wage workers who lack health insurance. The excise tax, which would be levied on insurers that sell the most expensive plans, is scored by the CBO as reducing health care spending over the long run and it is one of the few sources of financing on which the Senate has been able to agree. Without that money, Congress may be forced to make reductions in the affordability protections which would, in turn, strike at the core architecture of the bill—and Community Catalyst’s top priority in national health care reform. Without adequate subsidies and cost-sharing protections, the individual mandate becomes unworkable.

Con
“Overinsurance” is not a very convincing explanation for high U.S. health spending, and the tax will give insurers and employers an incentive to reduce the cost of the plans they offer. There are a number of ways to do this. Insurers could work to improve care delivery or they could reduce provider payments, but the path of least resistance is likely to be to skinny down coverage. This is exactly the opposite of what the American people want to happen.

People are looking for lower cost-sharing, not higher, regardless of whether health economists argue the tax will reduce aggregate spending—a goal that does not mean much to the average person. The excise tax not only consistently polls badly, but is also strongly opposed by organized labor which provides a disproportionate share of voters and dollars for Democratic candidates.

Further complicating the issue is that the policy itself is not well-drafted and, in the face of opposition, the response until recently had been simply to make the tax smaller rather than to make it better. The tax, as drafted by the Senate, did not adequately address the fact that plans may be high-cost—not because they have unusually rich benefits, but because of the age, gender, health status, occupation or geography of enrollees. The most recent changes have attempted to address some (but not all) of these problems.

Public option
Some progressives, both in and out of Congress, are calling for the return of the public option. They point out that since a reconciliation bill only needs 51 votes, the objections of conservative Senate Democrats who helped to toss the public option overboard is less important. Polling also shows that the American people still support the public option (though it is not the most important issue to them).

There are two problems with this argument. The first, as discussed below, is that working out an acceptable public option takes time, which is in short supply if we are going to get health care reform done.

The second problem lies more with the supposedly more liberal House than with the Senate. House leaders are still in search of 218 votes. While Speaker Pelosi has said the votes are there, there is still work to do. Several House members who provided the margin for victory the first time around are expected to vote no because of the Senate bill’s abortion provisions. Getting to 218 therefore means flipping first-round no votes to yes among Blue Dogs and other conservative Democrats—the same House Democrats who have been least supportive of the public option.

Hurdle two: “No, please, after you,” aka the trust deficit
The cooperation among committees of jurisdiction in the House and the Senate and commitment of all the key players to move forward this past year represents a stark difference from the reform attempt in the 1990s. But a problem has emerged that didn’t come up last time because a bill never got this far: The lack of trust between the branches. The adage, attributed to former House Democratic Speaker Sam Rayburn, that “the Republicans are our opponents, but the Senate is our enemy” captures the spirit of the current atmosphere, and this lack of trust and cooperation between the branches is one of the biggest obstacles to moving forward.

The House is afraid that if they pass the Senate bill first, the Senate won’t take up and pass the agreed on amendments through reconciliation. They want the Senate to move first, which greatly complicates the process because of the rules that govern the reconciliation process. For its part, the Senate thinks the House is making unreasonable demands in order to make the Senate look bad and blameworthy if health care reform doesn’t pass. These issues can be worked out, but it will take time, which brings us to the final hurdle….

Hurdle three: Time is not on our side
With popular support for health care reform below 50 percent—even if that’s based on a lack of understanding of what is actually in the bill—Democrats are eager to shift their focus. Top on their list is job creation and banking regulation.

But while a short breather might be helpful in nailing down the details of path and content for health care reform, time is running out. The closer it gets to the election, the harder it will be for some members of Congress to take what many consider to be a tough vote. And for various reasons, the parliamentary path that health care has to travel now becomes more difficult the longer we wait.

The bottom line is that a comprehensive bill still has a good shot at passage, but the opportunity is time-limited. We all have to make a strong all-out push in the next few weeks.

As the Super Bowl approaches, we go to the football analogy file. We’re just a few yards from the goal line, but it’s late in the fourth quarter. We just used our last time out and the game clock is ticking. Let’s carry it across.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

Fighting the good fight: Two tools to help get reform done

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Though health care reform has always been subject to the political tides, the political and legal challenges to reform legislation and its successful passage are rising. As supporters of reform who work with great advocates around the country,  we’re rising too (to the occasion) — here are two tools to help your reform work right now:

Making the economic case for health care reform

Sure, the Senate health care reform bill will help families save between $500 and $7000 a year on health insurance premiums, will limit out-of-pocket costs, and will cover 31 million uninsured people — Old News! But did you know the Senate bill is also good for the Economy? This fact sheet tells why. Download and share it.

Fighting the legal challenges facing national reform

And while the federal debate moves ahead, reform opponents in the states are already mounting constitutional and legislative challenges. Our new paper looks at these legal challenges and their political context, and offers talking points and organizing suggestions to respond, so you’ll be ready for Law & Order: Health Care Reform Unit!


–Kate Petersen,  Health Policy Hub

All eyes on Massachusetts

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

1107806152_4182248e16_mIn what could be a strange and cruel irony, today’s special election to fill the late Senator Kennedy’s seat may deal a damaging blow to the prospects of passing a the bill that would culminate Kennedy’s life’s work in the Senate.  A surging Republican State Senator Scott Brown has pulled even (or in some polls slightly ahead) of state Attorney General Martha Coakley.  Brown would provide the 41st vote against reform and prevent an amended bill from being taken up in the Senate.

Procedurally, a Brown victory gives Congressional leaders several options to get across the finish line: Pass the Senate bill without amendment in the House, get a compromise done before Brown is seated, or go back and do a new bill via budget reconciliation.  Each of these paths is possible, but has some pitfalls.

In the first scenario: It’s unclear that the House can drum up 218 votes for the Senate bill, with possible defections coming from both the right and left of the Democratic caucus. (more on House vote count below). A  variation on this theme that could be more palatable to House members would be to pass both the Senate bill and a reconciliation package amending that bill at almost the same time.  The reconciliation package would reflect many of the agreements currently being negotiated between the House and the Senate (though some could potentially be beyond the scope of what is permissible through the reconciliation process).

Assuming they can conclude a deal and get a CBO score in time, passing a House-Senate compromise would be possible, but rushing the bill through ahead of Brown’s seating could be politically controversial.  Will Senators such as Nelson, Lieberman and Lincoln, who have been hardest to win over to supporting reform, remain supportive if Brown wins?  A variation on this theme might termed the ‘Franken scenario.’ If the race ends in a photo finish, a recount and possible subsequent legal action could take weeks or even months, giving Congress more than enough time to complete its work.

The least likely scenario appears to be starting over with reconciliation. This would require a substantial rewrite of the bill, taking time that Congress is eager to devote to other issues.

Counting noses in the House

With all roads to victory requiring another vote in the House, securing 218 votes in that chamber has become a critical task for House leadership and the White House, and should be the number one priority for grassroots supporters of reform.

When the House passed its version of reform in August, the victory margin was a mere three votes. Now, with one vacant Democratic seat and one Republican who is unlikely to provide the margin of victory, passage in the House requires persuading all of the anti-abortion Democrats to vote yes on a bill that contains the Nelson rather than the Stupak language on abortion, or persuading some members who voted no the first time to vote yes. This task could be made more difficult if a Brown upset in Massachusetts scares off more conservative members of the caucus—even perhaps some who voted yes the first time.

Progress on getting to Yes

Against an uncertain political backdrop, House and Senate negotiators appear to be making major progress on reaching agreement on a final bill.  They struck a deal early Friday morning on the tax treatment of health benefits that would raise the threshold at which the tax kicks in, make adjustments for plans that are high cost for reasons other than the scope of benefits, and provide additional temporary protection for plans negotiated through collective bargaining.

The revised provision is projected to bring in $60 billion less revenue, a hole that negotiators are trying to fill, in part, by taking a tougher line on cost containment from health industry groups. This tactic is yielding mixed results – the biotech industry in Massachusetts, for instance, is threatening to endorse Brown for Senate if protections for it in the bill are watered down.  While making adjustments to the health insurance tax was a key priority for House negotiators as well as unions and other progressives, the lost revenue will complicate efforts to make progress on another key issue—improving the affordability provisions in the Senate bill.

Although details haven’t emerged yet, the debate over whether Exchanges should be run from Washington with a state option or from the states, with a national fallback appears to be resolving productively. Reports indicate that the bill may still give states the right of first refusal over whether to run an Exchange, but establish more clear and uniform requirements for those that do.

Still to come: How to finance the elimination of the Part D doughnut hole, and a significant dispute over the extent to which immigrants will be discriminated against in reform.  There, the two issues in play are whether states would receive federal funding for covering legal immigrants under Medicaid, and whether undocumented immigrants would be barred from the Exchange even if they pay entirely with their own money.

Most of the other big issues—such as what employers would required to contribute, and how the abortion language will be structured—are expected to more closely track the Senate bill.  Whether the individual mandate will track the stricter House version or the more porous model included in the Senate bill, should depend on whether real affordability improvements are made in the bill.  A worst-of-both-worlds resolution would be a tough mandate and significant penalties coupled with inadequate affordability protections.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

photo courtesy of croatry at flickr creative commons

Community Catalyst joins hundreds at Affordability Summit in DC

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Maybe you were there?

If not, see who was at PICO’s flickr page and get the details right here.

Affordability is Key!

Affordability is Key! Get it?

–Kate Petersen, Health Policy Hub