Public Plan Won't Happen in '09, But It's Inevitable
The chances of a public insurance option this year seem to diminish every day, but health insurers shouldn't celebrate the idea's demise just yet. It will happen eventually. All signs point to it.
President Barack Obama and leading Democrats want a public plan, but even if it doesn't happen this year, the public option is a powerful negotiating tool. Health insurers and Republicans are so petrified of a public plan that they will likely give in on a number of other issues.
The public plan's power is already evident as America's Health Insurance Plans has agreed to change two practices that have been an individual health insurance staple—not accepting members with preexisting conditions and charging women more for coverage—as long as lawmakers require all Americans to have health insurance. There is simply too much opposition to a public plan to happen this year. Instead of a public plan, this is the healthcare reform package I expect Congress will pass this year:
- An individual mandate that will require all people have a certain level of health coverage that the government will heavily subsidize to help pay for coverage of lower-middle-class Americans and will help fund by taxing mid-sized and large companies that don't offer health insurance. The individual mandate will be implemented slowly, but will require all Americans have coverage within the next five to eight years.
- Similar to the Massachusetts model, the feds will create a connector program that will help the uninsured find individual insurance. This is a win for health insurers, but the insurance industry will also have to give back something (see next bullet).
- The individual insurance market has been called the "wild west" because of its lack of regulations, but expect Congress to regulate the industry as a way to protect individual health insurance members. Layoffs and reduced employer health benefits have forced many Americans into the individual market, which is the one area of growth for health insurers. This growth has also caused lawmakers to focus more on that segment of the industry. Expect more regulations that go beyond the two proposed by AHIP.
- The feds will reduce healthcare costs by cutting hospital and physician payments, reducing payments to Medicare Advantage, and bundling payments that pay for care coordination and quality rather than volume, and investing more money in prevention programs in hopes of reducing long-term health costs.
In the short term, the health insurance industry will avoid the public insurance bullet, but will also have to sacrifice in the areas of more regulation and less Medicare Advantage payments. That doesn't mean the public plan idea will die though. In fact, it's inevitable. Most Americans have accepted greater government intrusion in their lives.
Government is now often seen as a solution rather than a problem, which is much different than in the days of Ronald Reagan. Plus, surveys show Americans want a public option to compete against private insurers. All of this points to my belief that a public insurance plan is inevitable.
This first pass at health reform will disappoint many liberals. But the public option will return after the midterm elections—and a watered down public plan may actually become law next time around.
This scenario is a nightmare for the health insurance industry—more regulations this time and a public plan next time. It's a one-two punch that will force health insurers to find ways to set themselves apart from the public plan, but if health insurers respond by streamlining programs and reducing administration costs, maybe that's not such a bad thing after all.
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Les Masterson is senior online editor for HealthLeaders Media. He can be reached at lmasterson@healthleadersmedia.com.
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Rick May MD (6/18/2009 at 10:16 AM)
Great column. I agree with your evaluation. The big for-profit insurance companies will drop millions to stop or delay a public plan, but in the end we have to have it. I do wish there was more public debate and discussion on the delivery side of the equation. We spend so much energy discussing financing that we miss the big issue which is our flawed delivery model. Until we are able to fundamentally change the way we deliver care (through integrated provider systems that accept full responsibility for all care for a given population) we can't hope to control costs or provide real quality. Shifting the dollars around won't fix our basic issues.
Bob Stone (6/17/2009 at 1:13 PM)
So, I'm not the only one that thinks that the Public Plan is most likely a stalking horse that the White House will sacrifice for "the greater good" of universal coverage?
Douglas DeAngelis (6/17/2009 at 1:12 PM)
Dear Lee, While I agree with your position that the public option is dead for now,the fact remains that no one is telling the truth about why private insurance costs so much more and why the price rises so much faster than inflation, or Medicare costs, for that matter-the government is ALREADY rationing care through reduced reimbursements and most providers (especially in Oregon, a low reimbursement state) are starving and would fold up the tent EXCEPT for the cost shift that private insurance covers with higher reimbursement allowances. This will only worsen, and unless the public understands that a "public" option will only continue this trend, and lead us directly to fully rationed health care in the future, which will reduce health care for all the people who currently are insured privately and like it... Be careful what you wish for.....