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Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

By Ken Terry | Nov 19, 2009

Just as the Senate’s reform legislation was about to be unveiled, Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), one of the chamber’s leading experts on healthcare, published a piece in the New England Journal of Medicine about why the bill would be disastrous if it passed. The piece adds little to the litany of Republican complaints about the Democrats’ approach, but it does contain more specifics than any of Grassley’s colleagues have been able to muster up to now.

Unlike most other Republicans, Grassley tried to influence the content of the legislation by participating in the discussions of the Senate Finance Committee. In fact, some of the cost-control aspects of the committee’s bill, which forms the backbone of the Senate measure, bear the mark of Grassley’s efforts. The Senator is quite right when he says in his NEJM essay that neither the Senate nor the House bills take a serious whack at healthcare spending growth. Yet he fails to mention that the Finance Committee bill-which he ultimately opposed-includes measures he favored, such as a value-based purchasing program for Medicare and further limits on Medicare payments to hospitals for treating hospital-acquired conditions.

Grassley lashes out in NEJM at the provision in the Senate Finance Committee bill to create a new Medicare panel of experts, based on the current Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC). The new commission would recommend changes in Medicare reimbursement that could only be overturned by an up-or-down vote in Congress, which is usually incapable of saying no to any healthcare interest group.  In the past, Grassley has agreed with some MedPAC recommendations, such as the need to reduce the growth of Medicare spending on imaging tests. Yet in his article, he says, “The damage that this group of unelected people could do to Medicare is unknown, although the top actuary at the Department of Health and Human Services recently concluded that cuts of this magnitude will limit benefits and decrease access to care for Medicare beneficiaries.”

Grassley criticizes the Democratic reform proposals on a number of other grounds. He claims they will cost nearly $2 trillion “when fully implemented,” although he doesn’t provide any evidence for that assertion. He says that a public plan will eventually drive private insurers out of business-again, without evidence. (While it is possible that a Medicare-like plan funded by the government could do that, the current public option proposals are very limited and unlikely to survive the legislative fight.) He complains about the expansion of Medicaid, although it’s hard to see how the majority of uninsured could be covered without it. And he assails the “taxes and fees that will be pushed onto the consumer.” Of course, most of those are related to the requirement that everyone buy insurance-another prerequisite for any serious coverage expansion. And the new tax on “Cadillac” plans in the Senate bill will help restrain health costs, most economists say.

A group of 23 leading health economists recently sent a letter to President Obama that provides a good contrast to Grassley’s article. In their letter, the economists said that reform legislation must include four elements if it is to have any chance of controlling healthcare inflation: deficit neutrality, an excise tax on high-cost insurance plans, an independent Medicare commission, and delivery-system reforms. The Senate bill includes all four–if you count demonstration projects as delivery-system reform. Consequently, the measure offers a good starting point for debate. If Sen. Grassley and his fellow Republicans truly care about controlling the healthcare costs that threaten the nation, I hope they will engage forthrightly in that discussion.

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

    m.s.f.

    11/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

    Mr. Terry:

    Once again you disappoint.

    To be quite honest with all of us - are you in favor of socialism or do you just have this infatuation with the Democratic Party and all things liberal? If you let us know at least this one tidbit of information, it will let us know if we need to determine how much credence to put with what you "write".

    For your criticism of Senator Grassley, maybe you need to do more research. His concerns about Medicaid are completely valid. The tactic used by Senator Reid to push more of the costs to Medicaid has the benefit of lowering what CAN be scored by the CBO. What Senator Grassley is referencing with the $2T cost refers to the TOTAL package - what is in this piece of trash, err, legislation (sorry, Freudian slip) and the ultimate costs that will be pushed off to the states in the form of Medicaid.

    Once again to return to the larger picture, the much larger picture - how is this going to be paid for? ALL of it, not just the portion in this one bill. Just this week, Congress passed an additional $200B appropriations bill for the doctors in Medicare (remember that one from the House version where cost adjustments were not included in the bill?) which is obviously not included in either calculation of the House or Senate bills.

    On yet a much larger scale is who is going to continue to finance our country? Liberals, like you, have these grand ideas of all these things you want to do. The problem is you really don't know how to pay for them. China now holds a majority of our debt. Just this week, the Chinese government expressed misgivings over the amount of debt we are running up. Such comments sound more like a bank than a "trading partner" as they are so often referred.

    If you check out the White House's own budget projections through 2019 http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/assets/fy2010_msr/10msr.pdf on page 60 you will see that by the year 2019, the federal TOTAL budget deficit will be over $24T, yes TRILLION, dollars. Currently, it is just under $10T.

    Now, let's be completely honest with everyone reading this - are you comfortable with the Chinese owning such a large chunk of our debt? Are you comfortable with any debt? Do you have any idea what will happen if the Chinese decided to simply dump a percentage of the debt they own? And we will be expecting others to shell out another $15T over the next 10 years? When are you, and all of the liberals and some Republicans going to figure out you cannot continue to do this?

    And this is where it starts - with budget projections that are naive at best, at worst they are completely deceptive. Senator Grassley is trying to explain to you and to us there are costs that the legislators on the Hill know full well will come to pass making this project much more expensive than the pie in the sky number the CBO scored and you are simply not listening.

    Mr. Terry, let's call it what it is - THE KING HAS NO CLOTHES!



  •  
    2

    Ken Terry

    11/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

    MSF, I suggest you read Ezra Klein's excellent article in the Washington Post about the tradeoffs involved in the Senate bill (I've added the link to the last paragraph of this post). The CBO projects that this bill will actually reduce the deficit in the long run. The Republicans can scoff that there is no way that Congress will actually stick to the revenue reductions and other changes necessary to do that--but it is doable, especially with a Medicare commission making the hard choices. Moreover, it has to be done, or the country will indeed go broke.

    As for the $200 billion, 10-year "fix" to the physician payment formula, I'm unaware that the House has passed that, although it did repeal the "sustainable growth rate" formula. What will replace that formula is still unknown, but I think that some combination of short-term payment increases and long-term methodological changes to reward quality and cost-efficiency would be the right way to go.

    As for the Chinese, they're not about to slit their throats by yanking the rug out from under us. And let us not forget that the Bush Administration roughly doubled the size of the national debt that had accrued in the entire history of our country--and that didn't count the bailout that the Republican Administration's myopia and favoritism to Wall Street made inevitable. The Obama people are now starting the long process of digging out of the very deep hole that Bush put us in.

  •  
    3

    aMUSEher

    11/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

    Our country is already "broke". It would be great if we could blame it on one idiot, like Bush, however, each year since 1969, Congress has spent more money than its income. We owe an estimated $14 Trillion dollars. China is a not a good will ambassador and has us over the proverbial barrel, as do other countries. Obama is tied to strings that others pull. We have sold our nation to foreign interests, based on our enormous debt burden and loss of GNP. Our financial regulators have been hijacked. Welcome to the new third world country.

  •  
    4

    m.s.f.

    11/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

    Please tell us you are not so naive to think this thing will only cost $849B?

    For the $200B, it is HR3961 passed yesterday. Though not the $245B which was defeated earlier, CBO scores it at $200B - see link: http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/107xx/doc10704/hr3961.pdf

    As for you lack of understanding of the bill itself, maybe you need to read it for yourself - there are some very interesting points to this legislation. The link is: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d111:h.r.03962:

    For the Chinese, stop thinking like an American and think like the Chinese. Their focus, as with most Asians, is on the long-term - longer than the next quarter or the next election cycle. So what if the US goes bankrupt - they will survive and come out stronger as a result.

  •  
    5

    Ken Terry

    11/20/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Grassley's Attack on Reform Belies Some Earlier Stands

    Thank you, MSF, for drawing my attention to the CBO study. It is very interesting that neither the AMA response nor the response from the Medical Group Management Association mentioned how much the House bill would cost.The Senate, however, has already defeated a similar measure. I'll discuss this in a forthcoming post.

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