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House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

By Ken Terry | Oct 30, 2009

While healthcare industry players continue to salivate over the prospect of millions of new patients with insurance, the unified House reform bill would also ding the healthcare and insurance companies to varying extents.

The measure, designed to cover 36 million more Americans, would hit the insurance, drug and device sectors with new taxes and restrictions. Hospitals would lose some reimbursement from the $426 billion in Medicare and Medicaid cuts in the House bill-about the same as in the Senate bill. But physicians would get socked much harder, unless the House can figure out how to pay for rescinding scheduled Medicare payment decreases that total more than $200 billion over the next 10 years. The Senate has the same problem, after the defeat of a separate bill that would have canceled the drop in Medicare payments to doctors.

Under the House bill, the pharmaceutical companies, which had earlier negotiated an $80 billion reform “contribution” with the White House, would have to fork up another $60 billion in rebates on drugs used by seniors who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid. In addition, Medicare would be able to negotiate drug prices for the first time.

The device manufacturers got off somewhat easier in the House legislation. In place of the $40 billion that the Senate version would levy on the device makers, the House toll is around $20 billion. (The Senate is also planning to reduce it to that level, some reports say). In addition, the 2.5 percent tax on medical device revenues in the House bill would go into effect three years later than its Senate counterpart.

The insurance industry loudly protested provisions affecting them in the House bill, including the public option and the repeal of the antitrust exemption for insurance companies. Karen Ignagni, CEO of America’s Health Insurance Plans, predicted that the House version of the public option “would bankrupt hospitals, dismantle employer coverage, exacerbate cost-shifting from Medicare and Medicaid, and ultimately increase the federal deficit.” Similarly, the Blue Cross & Blue Shield Association said the public option endangered employer-provided insurance, which now covers about 160 million people.

They needn’t have worried. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the public option in the House plan would attract only 6 million enrollees and would have higher premiums than private insurance plans. And according to some on the left, the public options being proposed in the House and the Senate are a sham that would neither reduce costs nor be a viable competitor to private insurance.

If that’s the case, why is the insurance industry, as well as business coalitions, working so hard to stamp out the idea? Most likely, it’s because they see any public option as the proverbial “camel’s nose under the tent” that could eventually lead to a single payer system. Businesses don’t like that because it would mean that the government could compel them to pay a significant amount for their workers’ health care. That’s also the other major reason why business groups oppose the House bill: It would require employers with payrolls of greater than $500,000 to cover their workers or contribute 8 percent of their payroll to a federal fund that subsidizes coverage for those who can’t afford it on their own.

With all of these interest groups slugging away, here is no doubt that reform legislation will go through many more twists and turns before anything passes. Stay tuned.

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

    MediaMentions

    10/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    From all that I've heard so far, including the most current articles like this one (http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/showlink.aspx?bookmarkid=N7DB1ZHVA8V4&preview=article&linkid=64c32b97-57a6-4444-aaa5-f113b2f555d7&pdaffid=ZVFwBG5jk4Kvl9OaBJc5%2bg%3d%3d), I'd have to assume that we are progressing. That is good.

    Sincerely,
    MediaMentions

  •  
    2

    verycold

    10/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    No offense, but who leaves a link such as above?

    As far as progressing, in order to get the ball rolling to re-create a health care system, it has to be funded. That means more than the rich will pay. So we agree that everybody, including those retired on Medicare will be paying considerably more for their health care and receiving a lot less. It has been reported that the AMA has released doctor numbers that include those retired. So really the number of practicing doctors is a lot less than we thought. So add millions more to an already burdened health care system and there will be long lines and waiting times for most regions here in the US. When I worked in Dallas, TX many years ago the country hospital, Parkland, was incredibly busy with gang injuries as well as those expressly having to use that hospital. It was crazy in the ER back in the 80s. I can't imagine what it is like today.

    So let's review. There will be shortage of medical staff because those getting insurance will most definitely feel they need to use it. That is one of the problems with the idea that insurance makes for good health care. Good health care depends on the region and depends on the hospital. Keep in mind that 43 percent of practicing doctors do not take Medicare patients. I bet at some point all doctors will be forced to take them. Just wait and see.

    I feel the heavy hand of government getting closer and closer.

  •  
    3

    xavier_12345

    10/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    Healthcare bill nowadays is a common issue for all of us. Even on the net and television, this issue is being discussed. What can I say is there is nothing wrong about it. It is good that lots of people are being open in discussing this, but before that let us make sure first that we understand what we are talking about. My point is, let's know first clearly what really this Healthcare Bill is.

  •  
    4

    Coach-Lee-428

    11/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    As much as things change they remain the same. This is still a scam to take control of 1/6 of the economy. Between the automobile manufacturers and the banks, the government will be regulating everything you do. Count me out of this fascist regime asap and it is a good thing that many like me are seeing what is actually happening.

  •  
    5

    jaybeecham

    11/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    Wow - Think how cool it would be without regulations... Federal bail out dollars, medicare, the FDA, FCC, OSHA, emergency services, and so on... The airline industry is booming now that the airline deregulation act is in place...

    Coach Lee - Save the rhetoric and scary "fascist regime" comments for those haven't history, politics, & economics.

  •  
    6

    verycold

    11/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    Government take over divides up the country into those carrying the burden and those benefiting, but not contributing. It also punishes hard work and rewards laziness. It makes an honest vote impossible because who would vote to decrease government when that would mean their paycheck would decrease.

    Typically the youth votes for more government spending because their path then looks more comfy. So as an example, when the youth back in the 60s wanted to go to college they knew they would have to figure out way to pay for it or else not go. Families for the most part didn't have credit and thus had to save for such events. Today anybody can go to college and the government will give out that credit. The thing is it is given out unfairly in that if you have saved for your child's education you frequently don't quality because your family makes too much money. I am thinking about a family I know now that came from huge rural families that lived in poverty and yet all of them got a college education because they worked for it. When it was time to send their children to college they saved up half and looked for assistance. The bank lent them the money at a higher rate, interest now, whereas if they hadn't worked so hard during their lifetime they could have qualified for a lower loan and no interest now.

    This is where the current health care bill is leading us off this cliff we seem determined to go off of. Mandating insurance for all when we know that those that do not currently have insurance in many cases can't afford it. I would say this however. I think very few could not afford catastrophic insurance because I know many young people with such a policy that make under 30,000 yearly. I think many Americans find it distasteful to pay for health care when they feel it should be free. So instead of cutting back on the cigs or bar tab, or curtailing their debt with more children they don't want to do that. Most families need a serious correction when it comes to financial planning. Much like the government the money is poorly spent and as long as there is a safety net why should they change.

    We are back to personal responsibility that is a concept not in vogue any more. All Americans should have access to health care. It won't be equal since care varies depending on where you live. Just like education in this country is not fair. However the patient needs to have skin in the game as well. They need to pay their part and they need to do their part to live a healthier life.

  •  
    7

    Coach-Lee-428

    11/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    When you reduce defensive medicine, take personal responsibility, allow new medical teaching universities to be created, implement tort reform, the law of supply and demand will kick in and medical costs will be reduced.

  •  
    8

    jaybeecham

    11/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    Thank you Coach - Much more constructive and hits the heart of the REAL issues.

  •  
    9

    Coach-Lee-428

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: House Health Reform Bill Does Not Please Many in Health Care

    Jay - You are more than welcome and I appreciate your compliment. Far too often we become muddle in the symptoms posing as problems and this keeps us from seeing the real problems. Unfortunately, people no longer have the strong higher order thinking skills of years gone by and this keeps them from overall clarity regarding a specific issue. Leanne Hoagland-Smith

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