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Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

By Ken Terry | Sep 30, 2009

O.k., let’s do the math: If the public option favored by many Democrats had passed the Senate Finance Committee, and if Congress adopted a bill that included it, about 8 million people would enroll in a government-sponsored health plan, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Assuming there are about 300,000 primary-care physicians in the U.S., and that every single one of them participated in the public plan, that breaks down to 27 patients per primary-care doctor. And, since most people are not seriously ill at any given time, specialists would see far fewer publicly enrolled patients.

My point is that, whether the government offered to pay physicians and hospitals at Medicare rates (as Sen. Jay Rockefeller proposed) or negotiated rates with them (Sen. Charles Schumer’s proposal), there would be little reason for physicians to participate in a plan that paid them substantially less than commercial payers did. That being the case, a public option, as currently conceived, would be unable to reduce insurance costs by reimbursing providers at below-market rates.

It is true, as Schumer notes, that a public plan would not have to turn a profit or satisfy stockholders; but it would have to break even, if it were not subsidized by the government. And, as the history of not-for-profit insurance plans shows, they behave pretty much the same way that for-profit plans do in the marketplace. They must do the same things that the for-profit plans do-such as refusing to pay for non-covered tests and treatments and driving hard bargains with providers-or they would lose money. Alternatively, they could raise rates; but if they increased them more than their for-profit competitors did, their members would desert them. All of this would be true of a public plan-which, by the way, would have the same marketing and administrative costs as private plans do. The notion that a public plan would have the low administrative expense ratio of Medicare is a fantasy, because Medicare has a built-in membership and does not have to compete with other plans.

Somehow, the CBO found that a public plan could save $50 billion over 10 years within the framework of Sen. Max Baucus’ reform bill. I’m not sure what assumptions were used; but, even if they are reasonable, $5 billion a year in a $2.5 trillion system is hardly even pocket change.

Yet, despite this overwhelming arithmetic, the Democrats have managed to persuade a large part of the country that a public plan is essential to healthcare reform. Consider these remarks from Mary G. Wilson, national president of the League of Women Voters:

“The public option is the key to consumer choice and to lowering health care costs. Both are essential elements of health care reform. The Finance Committee’s failure will hurt consumers and result in higher costs. How could they be so short-sighted?”

I have the same question for the Finance Committee, and for other Democrats in Congress: How could they be so short-sighted that they cannot see what a minor part of healthcare reform the public option actually is? It is time for them to move past their fixation on this ineffective approach and focus on what they can do to rescue our healthcare system.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    markherb

    09/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    I think that some elements that have value in the public option are that Medicare is moving towards paying for "outcomes" rather than processes. Insurers like processes you can charge and charge with little accountability.
    The other issue is that as long as we have a substantial population that is uncovered their health care needs tend to be dealth with in crisis mode in an ER, the least cost efficient way possible. Oh yeah, not for profit health care providers must provide coverage to these people, the insurers don't have to cover them Kind of slick, by the eliminating the sickest your margins go way up.....

  •  
    2

    MNMadMan

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    Many doctors in larger networks discovered that they
    themselves are paying a different insurance and their rates are
    also going up. Their malpractice rates. Many have a certain
    amount of self-insurance and an umbrella of catastrophic or
    large-payout insurance. That may be a program we should look
    at for many Americans. Health savings programs up front and
    catastrophic insurance in the corporate or large group systems
    (Alumni, Coop, whatever). We do have more Americans falling
    off of their work insurance. When they try to enroll in
    something, their mid-priced options are few. Having these
    systems be portable will go a long way towards reducing the
    uninsured population.

  •  
    3

    Coach-Lee-428

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    What we are missing here in this discussion is public responsibility for leading a healthy lifestyle. The entire health care reform discussion is reactive instead of proactive and hence why costs continue to rise. Personal responsibility is critical and is being ignored in the public discussion.

  •  
    4

    verycold

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    Should companies provide health insurance as a benefit at all? For all the hatred spewed at the insurance industry do we need them as part of the equation at all?

    Again, the flaw is linking medical care with insurance. I will use somebody I know well that is on medicaid and hasn't worked in many years. He is in his 40s. He is completely dependent on the government because he got addicted to drugs and alcohol. So his entire monthly budget come from the US taxpayer. He become extremely ill a year ago and required a very long stay in the hospital. He is terminally ill. I can't imagine what his hospital bill was. I know he got the best care and got access to the best just like my insurance would allow me to do. However he never paid into the system, but has taken out in large quantities. In my town, there are hundreds just like him. Maybe thousands. In all the cases I know about personally, it was personally inflicted misery. He is a very nice man, very gifted, smart, funny, etc. He is also a terrible drain on our economy. He is not a contributor.

    Mass care has provided health care insurance for all. I think they have succeeded reaching better numbers than the US stats. But what has really been accomplished? Is there enough doctors to go around? I don't think so which accounts for the long waits to get appointments and in those waiting rooms. Are they getting better care than before? My friend remember as a state ward got great care. I think nothing much has changed for Mass residents except somebody is now paying a mandated insurance premium for those in MASS. That somebody is the taxpayer if they can, or the state of MASS by way of subsidies. However those subsidies are causing the state budget to fail.

    Medicare, a public option, is bleeding red ink because finally the input is less than the output. It really doesn't take a Harvard graduate to have seen that coming.

    If you expand Medicare to act as the public option, it will need to be overhauled first. That program will need to be run like a not for profit with all the guidelines of a for profit business. So really the public option plan is just re-inventing the wheel unnecessarily while refusing to really look hard and long at the numbers.

  •  
    5

    JMaguire80

    10/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    There is very little affordable insurance for the low income populace. The public option that is being presented may not be the solution, but a public option is necessary.
    However, the entire system needs to be corrected. Doctors and Insurance Companies are working towards separate goals, but both sides are in the business of making money, this is where the entire system is flawed. Health care was never intended to become big money, considering it is a practice fashioned solely around health and healing.
    Dr. Peter Anderson founded Family Team Care because of the inadequacies of the current model, "With the advent of managed care in the past 15 years, there has been a tremendous increase in administrative and bureaucratic responsibilities of the primary care physician. The increased demand has greatly limited time left for patients and made it even more difficult to meet bottom line." http://www.ourblook.com/component/option,com_sectionex/Itemid,200076/id,8/view,category/#catid107

  •  
    6

    Coach-Lee-428

    10/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    The Public Option under current discussion will again redistribute wealth, make the overall health care system far more costly and deliver far less quality. Again, when does the government especially the federal government run anything efficiently and effectively. Also, this ignores personal responsibility which is the true key to public option.

  •  
    7

    verycold

    10/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why The Public Option Is Not Essential to Reform

    So we can all agree that aging baby boomers will be taxing the system like never before. If those folks are retired we can hardly expect them now to pay extra for their health care and so the youth in our country will be saddled with that burden. So if there is a public plan it will have to include covering the youth in the hopes they don't use the system but instead fund it for those that are sick and need the care. It is hard to know if those currently uninsured are more sick than healthy. The youth refusing to buy insurance we can presume are healthy. Many others may have neglected their health for years.

    Besides the human world, I know the equine world very well. About 10 years ago, when the population felt they were rich, they bought into the scam that horses could benefit from many of the same supplements that humans take every day. The problem is not with the supplements, but the delivery. It is now a huge industry that does little to address the actual health of horses. And yet, perfectly intelligent people throw tons of money at it not improving the lives of their stock of believing they are.

    Now I see those same perfectly intelligent people getting scammed by this health care reform that refuses to be HONEST about the facts. As of yet, no bill is really addressing tort reform which we know is a lack of political courage. Nobody is addressing the fact that for years the amount of medical personnel has been kept minimal to keep wages and services high. If there was a doctor on every corner the price of medical care would drop. As it is now, there is a shortage will only will become more of a problem once the uninsured are given insurance. It would take years to bring those numbers up to where they should be and so far nobody is even talking about this shortage. Unlike all other types of insurance, people love to use their health insurance and feel entitled to do so. So the supply and demand will worsen. If it is true that 40 percent of the doctors plan to leave the profession if this health care reform as being offered is hoisted on them, things will really get worse. What I have seen, having known many doctors in my lifetime, is that as they age they work considerably less hours. They have made a lot of money and want to enjoy the pleasures they bought. I also am seeing many more specialists than family doctors since they can work less hours and get paid a lot more. So if that is true how many family doctors will want to work more hours than they are currently? How many do you think will enter the field knowing the caseloads they will have to content with?

    The idiots in Washington have lived far too long in that bubble that doesn't include waiting.

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