98
National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric) Aaron E. Carroll, MD, MS September 17, 2008

National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

  • Upload
    krista

  • View
    26

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric). Aaron E. Carroll, MD, MS September 17, 2008. Disclaimer. Watch this space!!!!. The Iron Triangle. Cost. Quality. Access. Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994). Let’s compare…. United States Japan Germany China United Kingdom France Italy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

National Health Insurance

(Facts, not rhetoric)

Aaron E. Carroll, MD, MS

September 17, 2008

Page 2: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Disclaimer

Watch this space!!!!

Page 3: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

The Iron Triangle

Access

Cost

Quality

Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994)

Page 4: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Let’s compare….1.United States

2.Japan

3.Germany

4.China

5.United Kingdom

6.France

7.Italy

8.Canada

9.Spain

10.South Korea

Page 5: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

The Iron Triangle

Access

Cost

Quality

Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994)

Page 6: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Total Expenditure on Health per Capita (US$

PPP)

OECD, 2006

Page 7: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Total Expenditure as % GDP

OECD, 2006

Page 8: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

The Iron Triangle

Access

Cost

Quality

Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994)

Page 9: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Life Expectancy Total Population at Birth

OECD, 2006

Page 10: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Infant Mortality per 1000 Births

OECD, 2006

Page 11: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Maternal Mortality per 100,000 Births

OECD, 2006

Page 12: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Pop Immunized for DTP

OECD, 2006

Page 13: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Elderly Pop Immunized for Influenza

OECD, 2006

Page 14: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Total Preventable Years of Life Lost per 100,000 Pop

OECD, 2006

Page 15: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

CT Scanners per Million Pop

OECD, 2006

Page 16: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

MRI Units per Million Pop

OECD, 2006

Page 17: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Practicing Physicians per 1000 Pop

OECD, 2006

Page 18: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How hard is it to get care?

Commonwealth Fund Survey, 1998

Page 19: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Continuity of Care

Commonwealth Fund Survey, 1998

Page 20: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

The Iron Triangle

Access

Cost

Quality

Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994)

Page 21: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Number of Uninsured Americans

Tabulation from CPS and NHIS Data

Page 22: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Census 2006

•Number of uninsured Americans is now 47 million

•A rise of 2.2 million

•Biggest jump since 1992

•Now more uninsured people than at any time since passage of Medicare and Medicaid in the mid-1960's. 

2006 CPS statistics

Page 23: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Census 2006

•Over 90% of the newly uninsured have middle or high incomes

•1.4 million (64%) are families making more than $75,000 per year

•633,000 (29%) are families earning between $50,000 and $75,000 per year

•Over half are full-time workers

2006 CPS statistics

Page 24: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Census 2006

•Number of uninsured children rose by 611,000

•Those covered by employment-based insurance decreased from 60.2 % to 59.7%

•Number covered by public programs decreased as well

2006 CPS statistics

Page 25: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Why is this important?

•Uninsured people:

•Less likely to get primary care*

•Die sooner*

•Receive less prenatal care§

•Have poorer birth outcomes§

•Suffer annual health loss of $1600-$3300¥

* Med Care Res Rev 2003; 60:3S-75S. § Health Insurance is a Family Matter (2002)¥ Hidden Costs, Value Lost: Uninsurance in America (2003)

Page 26: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Why are People Uninsured?

•National Average for Employer-provided Insurance

•Single Coverage - $4,479 per year

•Family Coverage - $12,106 per year

•Annual minimum wage income = $10,712

•Annual Wal-Mart worker income = $17,114

Kaiser Family Foundation/HRET Survey, 2007

Page 27: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

The Iron Triangle

Access

Cost

Quality

Medicine’s Dilemmas (1994)

Page 28: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Proposals for Reform

Page 29: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

John McCain• “The problem is not quality” - US has the best

healthcare system in the world

• MSAs greatly improve system by placing greater responsibility on individual patients and families

• Improve access with walk in clinics in retail outlets

• Separate insurance from employers and make it portable

• “Guaranteed Access Plan”

• $2,500 - $5000 tax rebates will ensure coverage

Page 30: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Medical Savings Accounts

•Tax-deferred deposits for medical expenses

•Must be coupled with a high-deductible health plan (HDHP)

•Withdrawals from this account go toward paying the deductible expenses in a given year

Page 31: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Medical Savings Accounts

•Cost-sharing DOES reduce utilization

•Less necessary or unnecessary care?

•Discourages prevention

•Complex to administer - insurers have to keep track of all out-of-pocket payments

•Congressional Budget Office projects that MSAs would increase Medicare costs by $2 billion

Page 32: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How insurance works

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

Page 33: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How MSAs work

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

$

Page 34: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

A Few Account for Most Spending

Decile of Privately Insured

Perc

ent

of

Tota

l H

ealt

h C

are

Spendin

g

MEPS Data

Page 35: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Hillary Clinton•Government program as well as private

plans

•Everyone can buy into Federal Benefits Program

•Government subsidies for low-income

•Medicaid and SCHIP expansion

•Regional purchasing plans

• Individual mandate

Page 36: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Barack Obama•Government program as well as private

plans

•Everyone can buy into Federal Benefits Program

•Government subsidies for low-income

•Medicaid and SCHIP expansion

•Regional purchasing plans

• Individual mandate (for children)

•Federal government picks up the cost of “reinsurance” for “catastrophic costs” for private health plans

Page 37: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Seductive Verbiage

•Shared responsibility

•Lets people keep what they have

•Everyone will work together to make the system more efficient

• Individuals and businesses can choose if they want the government plan; if so, the system will “evolve toward a single-payer approach.”

Page 38: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

None of These Plans Will Work!

•They cost hundreds of billions of dollars

•They benefit only those with low incomes and those without insurance

•They don’t solve any of the problems (especially rising costs) that concern everyone

•None envisions a real structural change

Note: Half of middle- and lower-income adults experience serious problems paying medical bills or insurance premiums. (Commonwealth Fund 2006) These plans do nothing for them. 

Note: Half of middle- and lower-income adults experience serious problems paying medical bills or insurance premiums. (Commonwealth Fund 2006) These plans do nothing for them. 

Page 39: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Massachusetts Health Reform

•< Poverty - Medicaid HMO

•100% - 300% Poverty - Partial Subsidy

•>300% Poverty - Buy your own

Page 40: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Massachusetts Health Reform

•If you are 56 and make $32,000:

•Annual premium $4080

•Deductible $2000

•After deductible, 20% co-insurance

Page 41: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)
Page 42: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Enforcing MandatesThe CrimeThe Crime The FineThe Fine

Violation of Child Labor LawsViolation of Child Labor Laws $50$50

Employers Failing to Partially Employers Failing to Partially Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for WorkersWorkers

$295$295

Illegal Sale of Firearms, First OffenseIllegal Sale of Firearms, First Offense $500 $500 max.max.

Driving Under the Influence, First Driving Under the Influence, First OffenseOffense

$500 min.$500 min.

Domestic AssaultDomestic Assault $1000 $1000 max.max.

Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of AnimalsAnimals

$1000 $1000 max.max.

Communication of a Terrorist ThreatCommunication of a Terrorist Threat $1000 $1000 min.min.

Being Uninsured In MassachusettsBeing Uninsured In Massachusetts ~ $2000~ $2000

Page 43: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Enforcing MandatesThe CrimeThe Crime The FineThe Fine

Violation of Child Labor LawsViolation of Child Labor Laws $50$50

Employers Failing to Partially Employers Failing to Partially Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for WorkersWorkers

$295$295

Illegal Sale of Firearms, First OffenseIllegal Sale of Firearms, First Offense $500 $500 max.max.

Driving Under the Influence, First Driving Under the Influence, First OffenseOffense

$500 min.$500 min.

Domestic AssaultDomestic Assault $1000 $1000 max.max.

Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of AnimalsAnimals

$1000 $1000 max.max.

Communication of a Terrorist ThreatCommunication of a Terrorist Threat $1000 $1000 min.min.

Being Uninsured In MassachusettsBeing Uninsured In Massachusetts ~ $2000~ $2000

Page 44: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Enforcing MandatesThe CrimeThe Crime The FineThe Fine

Violation of Child Labor LawsViolation of Child Labor Laws $50$50

Employers Failing to Partially Employers Failing to Partially Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for Subsidize a Poor Health Plan for WorkersWorkers

$295$295

Illegal Sale of Firearms, First OffenseIllegal Sale of Firearms, First Offense $500 $500 max.max.

Driving Under the Influence, First Driving Under the Influence, First OffenseOffense

$500 min.$500 min.

Domestic AssaultDomestic Assault $1000 $1000 max.max.

Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of Cruelty to or Malicious Killing of AnimalsAnimals

$1000 $1000 max.max.

Communication of a Terrorist ThreatCommunication of a Terrorist Threat $1000 $1000 min.min.

Being Uninsured In MassachusettsBeing Uninsured In Massachusetts ~ $2000~ $2000

Page 45: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

MassachusettsUninsured from 583,000 to 657,000 in 2006

Initially said 215,000 for $725 million - now say 150,000

Uninsured from 583,000 to 657,000 in 2006

Initially said 215,000 for $725 million - now say 150,000

Page 46: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Cost

•Reliance on private companies accounts for 20% or more of total health care spending

•Profits, marketing, and overhead costs

•Wasteful billing and administrative burdens imposed on the entire system

Accounting for the Cost of Health Care in the United States, McKinsey and Company, January 2007

Page 47: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

U.S. Overhead Spending

International Journal of Health Services 2005; 35(1): 64-90

Page 48: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

U.S. Overhead Spending

International Journal of Health Services 2005; 35(1): 64-90

Page 49: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Cost

•Out of 300 million Americans

•35.6 million elderly on Medicare

•45.4 million non-elderly on Medicare, Medicaid, VA

•18.2 million through public sector

•About one third of Americans covered by public insurance

New York Times, 12/3/2006

Page 50: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Cost

•In 2006, $1.96 trillion spent on healthcare

•Public expenditures = $888 billion

•Tax Subsidy = $209 billion

•Public Employees’ premiums = $100 billion

•Total public expenditures = $1.2 trillion (61%)

New York Times, 12/3/2006

Page 51: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Private Insurance covers two thirds of the population and pays for only one-third of all health

care

Page 52: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Private Insurance

•Excessive administrative costs

•Excessive complexity

•Interference in decision making

•The nature of insurance companies

Page 53: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

National Health Insurance

Page 54: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

An Alternative Solution

•Expand Medicare to cover everyone

• Improve the coverage it offers

•Eliminate private insurance

•Automatic enrollment

• Income-based financing through employers and employees

Page 55: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Perceived Barriers to NHI

•Quality

•Cost

•Acceptance

•Public

•Physicians

Page 56: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Perceived Barriers to NHI

•Quality

•Cost

•Acceptance

•Public

•Physicians

Page 57: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How much do we already pay?

OECD, 2006 & Health Affairs 2002; 21(4): 99

Page 58: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How much do we already pay?

OECD, 2006 & Health Affairs 2002; 21(4): 99

Page 59: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

How are we paying for it now?

$1254 bn $372bn $333bn

Based on 2006 National Health Spending of $1.96 trilllion (CMS)

Page 60: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

We need about $700 billion

•Overhead costs

•$200 billion

•Repeal the tax-cut on those making more than $200,000

•$200 billion

Page 61: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Some new taxes

•Payroll tax of 3.5% - $300 billion

•This will replace employer insurance premiums

•Average large employer NOW pays about 8.5% in insurance benefits

Page 62: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

An example• Let’s say you make $100,000 at IU

• IU pays $10,000 for family insurance

• Now you make $110,000

• Payroll tax (3.5%) = $3850

• Extra Income tax (25%) = $2500

• Extra Medicare tax (1.45%) = $145

• Total new tax = $6495

• YOU MAKE MONEY

Page 63: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

A less rosy example• Let’s say you make $35,000

• Your job pays pays $4400 for insurance

• Now you make $39,400

• Payroll tax (3.5%) = $1379

• Extra Income tax (25%) = $1100

• Extra SS/Medicare tax (7.65%) = $337

• Total new tax = $2816

• YOU MAKE MONEY

Page 64: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

What if it costs more?

• Let’s say we need an extra $200 billion

• All pay a healthcare tax of 2% - $150 billion

• Health tax on wealthiest 5% - $250 billion

• Most people would still break even or make money

Page 65: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Don’t forget other savings

• No more co-pays

• No more deductibles

• No more premiums

• NO MORE OUT OF POCKET EXPENSES

Page 66: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Federal Studies•1991 GAO – break even without new taxes

•1991 CBO – break even/save $ without new taxes

•1993 CBO – cost $144 a year without new taxes

•1993 CBO – cost more initially, save $ in 7 years

•1993 CBO – cost more initially, save $ in 5 years

Page 67: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

State Studies• NM 1994 – Save $9 million per year

• DE 1995 – Save $6 billion in 10 years

• MA 1998 – Costs same without new taxes

• MD 2000 – Save $345 million

• VT 2001 – Save $118 million without new taxes

• ME 2002 – Costs same without new taxes

• RI 2002 – Save $4 billion over 6 years

• MI 2003 – Save $1.3 billion per year

• GA 2004 – Save $716 million per year

• CA 2005 – Save $314 billion over 10 years

Page 68: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Perceived Barriers to NHI

•Quality

•Cost

•Acceptance

•Public

•Physicians

Page 69: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Thinking about the country as a whole, are you generally satisfied or dissatisfied with

the cost of health care in this country? Would you say you are very (satisfied/dissatisfied)

or somewhat (satisfied/dissatisfied)?

59% - Very dissatisfied

22% - Somewhat dissatisfied

11% - Somewhat satisfied

3% - Very satisfied

4% - DK/NA

New York Times/CBS News Poll, Feb 23-27, 2007

Page 70: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

If you had to say, which do you think is a more serious problem right now — keeping

health care costs down for average Americans, OR providing health insurance for Americans who do not have any insurance?

65% - Providing for uninsured

31% - Keeping costs down

5% - DK/NA

New York Times/CBS News Poll, Feb 23-27, 2007

Page 71: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

If you had to choose, which do you think is more important for the country to do right

now, maintain the tax cuts enacted in recent years or make sure all Americans have

access to health care?

76% - Access to health insurance

18% - Cutting taxes

2% - Both

1% - Neither

4% - DK/NA

New York Times/CBS News Poll, Feb 23-27, 2007

Page 72: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Would you be willing or not willing to pay higher taxes so that all

Americans have health insurance that they can't lose no matter

what?

60% - Willing

34% - Not willing

6% - DK/NA

New York Times/CBS News Poll, Feb 23-27, 2007

Page 73: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Do you think the government should provide a national health

insurance program for all Americans, even if this would

require higher taxes?

64% - Yes

35% - No

2% - No Opinion

CNN Poll, May 9, 2007

Page 74: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Perceived Barriers to NHI

•Quality

•Cost

•Acceptance

•Public

•Physicians

Page 75: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Government Legislation to Establish NHI

Oppose40%

Support

49%

Neutral11%

Ann Intern Med. 2003 Nov 18;139(10):795-801

Page 76: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Survey Methodology

• Sent to 5000 random physicians

• Mailed the survey with a prepaid return envelope and a $1 incentive

• Participation voluntary and anonymous

• Non-responders contacted up to two times between July and October 2007

Those that did not wish to participate could return the survey unanswered, and would not be bothered again.

Those that did not wish to participate could return the survey unanswered, and would not be bothered again.

Page 77: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Survey Question• “Although proposals for national health

insurance may offer different strategies for service coverage, service delivery, and cost-containment, please answer the next 2 questions assuming that the principal goal of any national health insurance proposal is to arrange health care financing for all US citizens.”

• In principle, do you support or oppose governmental legislation to establish national health insurance?

Page 78: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Survey Response

• Of 5000 mailed surveys:

• 509 were undeliverable

• 197 were returned by non-practicing docs

• Received 2193 surveys from 4294 eligible participants, for a response rate of 51%

Page 79: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Government Legislation to Establish NHI

Ann Intern Med. 2003 Nov 18;139(10):795-801, and 2008 Apr 1; 148(7): 566-7

Page 80: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Results by Specialty

Ann Intern Med. 2008 Apr 1; 148(7): 566-7

Page 81: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Results by Specialty

Ann Intern Med. 2008 Apr 1; 148(7): 566-7

Page 82: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Perceived Barriers to NHI

•Quality

•Cost

•Acceptance

•Public

•Physicians

Page 83: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Census 2007

•Number of uninsured dropped by 1.3 million to 45.7 million

•Percentage of Americans uninsured was down to 15.3% from 15.8%

•8.1 million kids uninsured in 2007, down from 8.7 million

Page 84: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Census 2007

•Percentage of people covered by private insurance again down, from 67.9% to 67.5%

•Employment-based insurance also down, from 59.7% to 59.3%

•Percentage of people covered by Medicaid increased 0.3%

•Percentage covered by Medicare also increased, from 13.6% to 13.8%

This increase of 1.3 million individuals just happens to be the same number as the decline in the uninsured

This increase of 1.3 million individuals just happens to be the same number as the decline in the uninsured

Page 85: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Expenditures for Public Health

Programs

Wise PH, CPOP Stanford University

Page 86: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Expenditures for Public Health

Programs

Page 87: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)
Page 88: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

“...so many things are possible just as long as you

don’t know they’re impossible.”

“...what you can do is often simply a matter of what you

will do.”

-the King and the Mathemagician

-Princess Reason

Page 89: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Acknowledgments

•Ronald Ackermann, MD, MPH

•Richard Schreiner, MD

•Physicians for a National Health Plan

Page 90: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Number of Canadian Physicians Emigrating

Canadian Institute for Health Information

Page 91: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Indiana

•850,000 (1 in 7) Hoosiers without insurance

•Cigarette Tax - $206 million boost

•$500 for preventive care annually

•Personal Wellness Responsibility Accounts

•Basic coverage above $1100 in accounts

•SCHIP increase from 200% to 300% poverty

Page 92: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Indiana

•Getting the 350,000 eligible Hoosiers to sign up will be difficult

•Plan can serve 140,000 people (not an entitlement)

•FSSA happy if 50,000 sign up

•Coverage capped at $300,000/yr ($1 million life)

•Still will require sliding scale payments

Page 93: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

SCHIP

•Provides insurance to children in families too wealthy for Medicaid

•6.6 million children in SCHIP

•Among children between 100% and 200% poverty level, uninsurance dropped from 22.5% in 1996 to 16.9% in 2005

•Remained stable in higher-income families

•This means STILL 75% of those eligible in 1996 remain uninsured

Page 94: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Pop Daily Tobacco Smokers

OECD, 2006

Page 95: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

Alcohol Consumption Liters per Capita

OECD, 2006

Page 96: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Pop 65 Years or Older

OECD, 2006

Page 97: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Pop 19 Years or Younger

OECD, 2006

Page 98: National Health Insurance (Facts, not rhetoric)

% of Pop Immunized for Measles

OECD, 2006