Rerun: The Medicare monster

The Health Business Blog is taking a break and re-running some posts from 2008. If you’d like to comment, please do so on the original post.If things keep going the way they are, Medicare is going to gobble us up. It’s bad enough that the direct costs of the roughly $500 billion program keep growing quickly (thanks in part to Congress’s unwillingness to hold the line), but the true impact is even worse. Consider:

  • Only about half of Medicare costs are covered by payroll taxes. The rest come from general revenues, and the proportion is ever-growing
  • A large portion of Medicaid costs –namely nursing home costs for Medicare-eligible patients– should more fairly be classified as Medicare
  • Squeezes in Medicare reimbursement mean that commercial and uninsured patients pay more than they otherwise would, in order to help hospitals and physicians make up for their lower Medicare rates
  • The dominance of Medicare as a payer retards the rate of private sector innovation. As one health plan CEO told me, whenever they try a new payment scheme to induce behavior change, the hospitals just convert it back into Medicare equivalents, defeating the purpose. Since Medicare is the largest customer, it’s not completely irrational for hospitals to do that

What’s to be done? I don’t have a comprehensive solution, but here are a couple of ideas that are too radical even to be considered right now, never mind put into place:

  • Make Medicare means tested. Let richer people pay the full cost (or almost) if they want to participate; institute a sliding scale for everyone else based on income and assets
  • Let doctors and hospitals charge whatever they want, but require them to charge everyone  –Medicare, Medicaid, commercial insurers, and individuals– the same amount. Payers would be able to dictate the amounts they reimburse but they wouldn’t be able to forbid balance billing. In fact it would be required

What would this accomplish?

  • It would reduce Medicare’s impact on the system and (could) spur private sector innovation
  • It would end discrimination against those less able to pay, such as individuals and small businesses, while removing an unneeded subsidy from the well-off elderly
  • It would give providers responsibility for setting their own rates, letting those who want to compete on price and efficiency do so
  • It would encourage commercial plans to add value through network management, disease management, and so on rather than price negotiations

Of course there would be plenty of challenges in actually pulling this off, even if it made it past the formidable forces arrayed against any such move!

Previous
Previous

Rerun: Another double digit premium increase. Wal-Mart, can you help me?

Next
Next

Rerun: Locking out lock-in pricing