Election year brings focus on health
care.
by Barone, Mike^Miller, Cathy
Americans are worried about health care in a big way. In recent
Kaiser Health Tracking Polls, registered voters ranked health care
third, behind the economy and Iraq, as the issues they most wanted the
presidential candidates to discuss. Forty-two percent report that in the
last year they or a family member encountered problems accessing health
care due to cost. Sixty-six percent of those report their medical
condition got worse as a result.
With the presidential race down to two candidates, Americans are
examining how Senators Barack Obama and John McCain would reform health
care. McCain's plan provides for universal access to health
insurance but is against mandates requiring coverage for everyone.
McCain's plan supports a market-based approach with individual
choice and purchasing pools. Obama's plan mandates that all
children are covered and provides for a "play or pay" mandate
for employers. The play or pay approach requires employers to provide
insurance or contribute to the cost.
Both plans incorporate tax changes. Obama's includes a federal
subsidy to employers for catastrophic costs, income-based tax subsidies
for purchasing coverage, and a limited subsidy for small employers.
McCain's plan provides for tax credits ($2,500 individual/$5,000
families) for purchasing insurance, eliminating the employer tax
exemption, and additional tax incentives, such as depositing excess tax
credits to health savings accounts.
Obama's plan would allow state reforms as long as they meet
the minimum standards of the national plan. McCain's plan allows
states flexibility in Medicaid and encourages the development of
innovative, multiyear insurance products. In California, 2007 saw a
flurry of health care reform initiatives. From the Governor's Plan
to four other major proposals, the efforts to expand health coverage
stalled in January of this year. Governor Schwarzenegger promised not to
give up on health care reform in California, stating, "One setback
is just that--a setback. I still believe comprehensive health care
reform is needed in California."
So while the political discussions move forward, let's take a
closer look at health care in San Diego. To review our health care
environment, it is helpful to understand two basic health care cost
management choices: supply and demand. Managed care and HMOs provide
supply-side management of health care costs through controls, such as
gatekeepers, outcomes management, prescription formularies, utilization
review and medical necessity. Demand-side management is driven by the
insured. Often labeled "consumerism," the level of health care
utilization depends on the choices made by the insured. Those choices
may be influenced by financial reasons, rewards for compliance or
information that encourages healthy decisions, frequently called
transparency.
Unlike most of the country, Southern California still has a strong
HMO environment. In San Diego, the top eight HMOs (in terms of the
number of enrollees) show nearly 1.3 million members, 41 percent of the
estimated San Diego population.
According to Ed Johnson, managing director at Anthem/Blue Cross,
"San Diego members are still focused on the bottom line, their
economic needs. They still want low co-pays and rich benefits."
San Diego's two largest providers of care, Sharp HealthCare
and Scripps, have a critical influence on the delivery of health care.
Sharp continues to support capitation, a fixed payment paid per member
per month to the provider. Scripps, on the other hand, terminated its
capitation contracts with insurance carriers and operates only on a
fee-for-service basis. The impact forced insurance carriers to rethink
how they delivered health care benefits in San Diego. Carriers offer
companies employer-sponsored health plans with the option to offer
employees side-by-side health plans--one with Scripps in its network and
another, less costly plan, without Scripps in the network. Both
Anthem/Blue Cross and Aetna have reported an increased interest in
offering the "limited" or "concentric" network.
Although the supply-side management of HMOs may have waned in other
parts of the country, it still plays a key role in San Diego. The trend
toward demand-side management is a shift from the HMO growth of the
1980s that placed focus on provider behavior to focus now on the
consumer. There is an economic objective to control rising health care
costs, but also an equally important goal to improve access and quality
of care. The key to success is engaging the consumer to affect
behavioral change. This is a shift in thinking of heath care as an
expense to looking at it as an investment. The trend toward health
promotion, including wellness programs, health risk assessments, and
lifestyle and disease management programs, is receiving greater
attention.
Mike Giar, market head of sales and service at Aetna explains,
"Wellness is not a product--it's a strategic approach that
needs to engage the population in lifestyle changes."
Our current system manages disease. You get sick; the insurance
carrier pays your claim. Instead of managing disease, the trend is
moving toward managing health. Dr. Walter Willett, Harvard School of
Public Health, has stated that better lifestyle habits can help prevent
80 percent of heart disease and 90 percent of type-2 diabetes.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, "chronic
diseases--such as cardiovascular disease (primarily heart disease and
stroke), cancer, and diabetes--are among the most prevalent, costly and
preventable of all health problems."
However, only three percent of health care is spent on prevention.
The CDC notes that 75 percent of total health care costs are spent to
treat 45 percent of Americans who have at least one chronic condition.
Federal and state wellness initiatives recognize this trend toward
managing health. Proposed legislation provides tax credits to employers
that provide qualified wellness programs. For example, the Personal
Health Investment Today Act of 2007 (H.R. 245) would allow the purchase
of exercise equipment or participation in a fitness program to be
qualified as tax-deductible "medical care" expenses. If
enacted, it could allow reimbursement under flexible spending accounts,
health savings accounts and health reimbursement arrangements. In
California, legislation is pending that would require employers seeking
to do business with the state to provide their California employees with
wellness benefits (such as gym memberships). Both plans for the
presidential candidates include provisions to invest in preventive care
and improve the quality of care.
The economic trends in health care continue to receive national,
state and local attention. The supply-side management of managed care
and HMOs are still viable in San Diego. The trend, however, toward
managing health and providing the consumer with the tools and education
to make better choices, as well as providing incentives for positive
behavioral change, should certainly be explored.
An advertorial submitted by Intercare Insurance Solutions, an
employee benefits brokerage and consulting firm. Mike Barone is
president of Intercare Insurance Solutions and Cathy Miller is the
company's marketing manager.
For more information, please visit www.intercaresolutions.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CBJ, L.P. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.