Posts Tagged ‘Medicare physician fees’

The Unhealthy Consequences of Congressional Dysfunction

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

After caving in to a rebellion from the tea-party wing of the House Republican caucus, Speaker Boehner has pulled the plug on a bipartisan agreement to do a two month extension on a number of expiring federal policies — including a patch on the Medicare physician Sustainable Growth Rate formula, an extension of unemployment benefits and continuation of a payroll tax reduction. The two-month extension was meant to give House and Senate negotiators more time to find agreement on a longer term deal.

At this point, with the Senate adjourned and the House rejecting the short-term extension, it is hard to see how the issue will get resolved. However, in a year that has featured several near shut-downs of government and routine 11th hour legislating, we can’t discount the possibility that some agreement will be reached. Still, it can’t be taken for granted that Congress will pull yet another rabbit out of its hat, and the cost of failure, in health care terms, will be high.

Although the most high profile health issue in the debate is preventing a 27 percent cut in the Medicare physician fee schedule, there are other important provisions at risk, including an extension of the “QI” program, which pays the Medicare Part B premium for low-income Medicare beneficiaries, and Transitional Medical Assistance, which allows families who would lose Medicaid eligibility as a result of an increase in earnings to temporarily retain that coverage. But the problem doesn’t stop there.

A failure to extend unemployment benefits and the payroll tax cut will have significant consequences for health care. First, at least some people losing unemployment insurance will end up on Medicaid, increasing the cost of that program as states struggle to recover from the recession and replace the lost federal Medicaid funds. Secondly, taking the purchasing power of unemployment benefits and the payroll tax cut out of the economy will be a drag on employment and will translate into further increases in the number of uninsured and people on Medicaid.

So what we are faced with is yet another example of Speaker Boehner and the House Republican caucus electing to play chicken, placing important health care programs and our fragile economic recovery at risk. This has become something of a pattern ever since they threatened to force a default on U.S. government debt earlier this year. Unfortunately, chicken is a risky game that often results in someone getting hurt.

– Michael Miller, Policy Director

The Insider: Last minute collapse on doc payments, Medicaid and COBRA subsidies a bad omen?

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

In the lead-up to passing the health reform law, Congress debated what to do about the Medicare physician payment problem.  Under current law, the formula for setting Medicare physician payment rates, known as the Sustainable Growth Rate, or SGR, will impose large and escalating annual cuts on physician reimbursement.  The SGR issue was ultimately separated out from health care reform, and doctors were assured that the issue would be addressed before the scheduled payment cut June 1.  Physicians pressed for a permanent solution to the problem but because of the price tag, Congress scaled back, first to a 5-year patch and then to a 19-month fix.  The scaled-back SGR patch passed the House just before the Memorial Day recess, but without enough time for the Senate to act.  Theoretically that means that a Medicare payment cut of over 20 percent kicks in today, but CMS is holding onto claims for a couple of weeks assuming that when the Senate comes back they will enact a retroactive payment increase.

While the physician payment fix is likely to get sorted out, two other critical provisions face a more uncertain future.  With unemployment still high and state budgets still in trouble, House and Senate leaders attempted to extend enhanced federal Medicaid payments to states through the end of state fiscal year 2011 (the enhanced payments are currently scheduled to end halfway through the year) and to continue the subsidy of COBRA premiums created by ARRA last year.  But in what’s being described as victory for House fiscal conservatives, both of these measures were struck from the House legislation late last week, and whether the Senate will restore them remains uncertain.  Roughly 20 states are already counting on the extra Medicaid help in their state budgets.

However, that victory may prove short-lived. Both the COBRA and Medicaid provisions themselves are popular with core Democratic constituencies, and it’s entirely possible that the Democratic Blue Dogs who have drawn a line in the sand in the name of controlling federal spending will be punished at the polls, not rewarded, if the Medicaid and COBRA funding is not restored. They could lose support from the Democratic base without picking up any offsetting support from more conservative voters.

If funding is not restored there are several implications that go beyond politics.  The first is harm these cuts do to low- and moderate-income families who will lose coverage or services as a result. Second, the loss of COBRA subsidies is a blow to the drive to provide health security for all, while the loss of Medicaid funding will certainly turn up the heat on the already charged debate over the role of Medicaid in reform.  Finally, if there is a more conservative Congress in 2011 as anticipated, future debates over federal health care funding and implementation could become similarly difficult, with Congress unable to agree on funding for provisions in PPACA that are authorized but lack an appropriation.

The immediate implication for health care reform advocates is that we need to redouble our efforts to persuade the Senate to revive the COBRA and Medicaid funding.  It’s time to step in to keep reform on the right track.

More on Living in Chicken Little Land

You know it’s Chicken Little time when people can (and do) go on about how awful health reform is without any regard to the available facts.

Exhibit A:  Public opinion. The most recent Kaiser tracking poll (pdf) shows that the top concerns opponents have about health care reform is that it will increase health care spending and is not paid for.

Both the Congressional Budget Office and the CMS Office of the Actuary have refuted these claims in the past.  CBO has found that health reform will reduce the deficit (pdf) while the CMS actuary projects that reform will provide coverage to over 30 million people with a negligible increase in costs.  Recently, a Commonwealth Fund/Center American Progress analysis has suggested that both CBO and CMS are being too conservative in their projections.  Essentially both agencies assume no savings at all from efficiency gains, quality improvements and delivery system changes–sources that could, by moderate estimates, generate a potential $600 billion savings over 10 years.

Exhibit B: state government.  Numerous states have vociferously complained about the burden the Medicaid expansion, a core component of health reform, will impose on them; many going so far as to file a lawsuit to block the expansion.

The facts? A new paper released by the Kaiser Commission and the Urban Institute tells a different story (pdf).  The study shows that on average health reform will add only 1.4 percent to state Medicaid spending between now and 2019.  This is very similar to the 1.25 percent estimate developed by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.  And neither of these forecasts take into account savings to states from changes in the delivery system or from reductions in spending on services that are now 100 percent state funded but will be covered by Medicaid in the future.  Although state by state estimates vary, in no state does the federal government contribute less than 94 percent of the cost of the expansion.

Unfortunately, it isn’t much use telling the truth to people whose minds are already made up. Facts don’t matter to Chicken Little, who gets all his information from the Fox (news).  As we noted in the last post, the only thing that will persuade these folks is when the sky doesn’t fall in 2014 and, at least for some, they start receiving benefits under the law.  Then they’ll probably join the “keep government out of my Medicare” crowd.

DoJ presents its case
The Department of Justice has, in several legal briefs, laid out its basic arguments against the lawsuits seeking to undermine health reform.  Here’s a CliffsNotes version of the arguments:

•    States have no standing relative to the individual coverage requirement, which applies to individuals, not states (duh).
•    There is no need to block the law from going forward now since there is no possible injury until April 2015, when penalties for failure to purchase coverage would be due.
•    Individuals who now claim the law would require them to purchase coverage can’t know their circumstances in 2014, so the “injury” is purely speculative.
•    State residents cannot vote to exempt themselves from federal law they don’t happen to like.
•    The minimum coverage requirement is a reasonable part of the regulatory scheme that governs economic activity related to health care and health insurance, and thus falls within the Commerce Clause,
•    Tax penalties associated with the requirement to purchase coverage fall within Congress’ power to tax and spend for the general welfare.

Call it what it is—then change course

When responding to repeal proponents it’s important to:
a) Call the attacks what they are: an attempt to preserve an unsustainable status quo that leaves millions without coverage and millions more who have coverage at risk of financial ruin.

b) Turn to the benefits of the law—reform will:
•    Provide security to millions of working Americans
•    Guarantee people access to the same plans as members of Congress
•    Help women, children and people with serious medical conditions get more affordable and more secure coverage
•    Strengthen oversight of insurance premiums and help people get better value for their premium dollar

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

Too bad they can’t vote

Monday, October 19th, 2009

A substantial and growing cadre of prominent Republicans have come out in favor of health reform recently. A partial list: former majority leaders Bob Dole, Howard Baker and Bill Frist (who this week disputed critics who claimed that Obama was promoting socialized medicine), California Governor Schwarzenegger, former HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson, and former CMS chief Mark McClellan.  Not exactly a fringe element.

Yet there’s been no sign that these endorsements will move Republicans in Congress.  Maybe it’s something in the water in Washington, or maybe it’s just an indication of the extent of ideological or simply partisan polarization that so few sitting Republicans are willing to join party elder-statesmen in moving reform forward.  Right now, the calculus in the Republican caucus seems firmly set on continuing its near-unanimous opposition to reform – and carrying it into the 2010 elections and beyond (just in case you thought this issue was going away after passage.)

The Ladies from Maine Part I: Snowe Fall
Sen. Olympia Snowe’s aye vote on the Finance Committee reform bill ended intense speculation over which way the senior Senator from Maine would go.  To many, her vote suggests that she agrees with assessments that a yes vote in Finance gives her more leverage over the process going forward than continuing to dangle the carrot of her possible future support.  Snowe is now positioned to limit the movement of the bill to the left as it’s combined with the more liberal HELP bill, to be a key decision-maker on floor amendments, and perhaps even to have a formal role in conference committee.

In the eyes of the beholder
What is it that Sen. Snowe wants as the process moves forward?  One priority is preventing the inclusion of a public option except as a fallback.  A second Snowe priority is affordability.  At the same time, she has opposed most of the options on the table advanced to make better subsidies available.

A contradiction?  Not necessarily.  Affordability in Sen. Snowe’s eyes seems to be more about slimming down the coverage people would receive rather than making subsidies better—an idea that is getting some support in Democratic quarters, as well, even though the Finance bill already offers much less generous coverage than other proposals, particularly for low-wage workers.  Common Sense Affordability Protections, a paper released today by Community Catalyst and PICO, highlights the problems for low-income people in the Finance proposal and makes recommendations for how to fix them.

The Ladies from Maine Part 2: As Snowe goes so goes Collins?
Late last week, Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) indicated her openness to supporting reform.  This is welcome news in some quarters because of the challenge of getting 60 votes even with support from Sen. Snowe.  On the other hand, Collins’ statement triggers some alarm bells.

The concern she voiced over potential cuts to Medicare benefits (and misrepresenting what is in the bill) should be read as coded opposition to eliminating current overpayments to Medicare Advantage plans and other efforts to reduce Medicare spending  — measures that form an important part of the financing of the Senate bill.

This wouldn’t be such a problem if the Senate weren’t already having such a difficult time agreeing on revenue options.

But attacks on the current financing mix continue, especially from medical device manufacturers concerned about new fees they would have to pay, and from unions and progressives unhappy with the proposed tax on insurers who offer high-cost plans.  This tax is almost certain to be passed on to enrollees and would fall disproportionately on states with high health care costs and firms with older workers.  Senate negotiators are working to modify both of these revenue sources but the struggle will be not to lose revenue in the process.

Read the rest of the Health Reform Insider here.