Archive for the ‘health economics’ Category

October 29, 2009

Create Health Workforce Jobs for U.S. Economic Recovery

We all know that the employment picture in the U.S. continues to be dark. One in 10 Americans who wanted a job last month were unemployed. What many do not know is that private sector employment growth fell short of the number of new people entering the labor force by more than 500,00 jobs each year throughout the 1990s! The bottom line: Economists say the U.S. job creation engine has been stalled for the better part of a decade.  New enterprises are not coming on line. As older industries die, established industry and entrepreneurs are not entering the market place and using capital to create jobs.

 So where will jobs come from? Health care is an obvious choice. It’s time for a public policy to support this growth industry with a Jobs Bill for Health Care (similar to the post World War II GI bill). The bill would provide funds to train all comers – from the returning war vets to the unemployed, from the dying manufacturing industries to the recent high school graduates. This will produce not only the health workforce that the U.S. so desperately needs in the near and long term but also create a “product” that can be exported overseas – trainers for other countries’ healthcare challenges.

 In addition to direct investment, the government should ensure funding from the insurance industry and providers who do not now train health professionals but depend on the health workforce . Let’s ensure the health and economic future of the United States with a public-private partnership that makes sense.

September 17, 2009

Insurers Celebrate Baucus Health Reform Proposal

Wake up America!  Now you can learn who controls the U.S. health care system. Read the provisions of the  new health reform proposal by Senator Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and you will understand why for months there has been a smear campaign against the U.S. government promoting the myth that the federal government will control access to and dictate  choice within the health care system. While America was diverted in a riotous way from a rational approach to health care reform, the insurers were busy making hay with Senator Baucus to ensure that they maintained their stranglehold on the health care sector, the American taxpayer–and, of course, the U.S. Congress.  

With the Baucus proposal, we can truly say that  the federal government does not control health care but the insurance industry does? When and how often you see a doctor–and whether or not you get the necessary lab tests you need–and even which provider you see—are all determined–and will continue to be determined– by the insurers. 

Yesterday, I heard about a patient who was on the verge of a heart attack.  He saw his cardiologist who determined he needed a nuclear stress test immediately.  Did I say immediately?  According to  a top cardiologist he did?  According to his insurer, he had to wait two weeks for the test. Was this the government intruding in health care?  No, way. 

The government is not in your doctor’s office–but the health insurers are.   And now they will be in every house in America–like roaches, they are taking over.  Break out the Combat.

 Insurers broke out the champagne last night, knowing they succeeded in getting Senator Baucus  to allow them to make a killing with provisions for  U.S.  families to pay 13% of their income for healthcare coverage or pay a fine. A family of four with annual income of $65,000 would be asked to spend $8,450 on health insurance premiums before receiving any federal subsidy.  

 Certainly, Senator Baucus has been receiving too much  money from health insurance lobbyists to be in touch with the reality of the average American who cannot pay out 13% of their income on health insurance premiums.  The insurers are already raising premiums to cushion any blow that would come from doing away with non-payment for preexisting conditions.  After all, who is there to stop–or regulate– them?  The government?  With leaders like Baucus, I doubt it.

Where’s the reform?  Where’s the coverage?  Where’s the safety net? Where are the promises of President Obama?  The rising stock prices tell us who is benefiting from reform.  Perhaps Wall Street is also telling us that we learned nothing from the scandals of last year.  If the profits are only benefiting some big companies, something is very wrong.  It is time for Senator Baucus to recuse himself from the debate given that the first reaction to his health reform bill was mild pandemonium on Wall Street.

September 8, 2009

Baucus to Uninsured: Pay Up or Face Fines

According to reports about  Sen. Max Baucus’ latest plan for health reform, fines would be imposed on those individuals and families who do not buy health insurance–$950 for individuals and up to $3800 for families.  Senator Baucus, what kind of reform is this?   Talk about wasting resources.  How will the plan be monitored and enforced?  Maybe the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Transportation Security Administration can add insurance surveillance  to their duties.  As you are screened at airports, you have to show your insurance card.  Will Senator Baucus create the insurance police or just ask the OIG to create a new department?  Will neighbors be asked to report on neighbors and become insurance spies with some incentive program for reporting?  What happens  if you pay the fine and still don’t buy insurance?  Will you just pass GO and head directly to jail?

I can’t understand such a proposal.   Is Baucus worried about not throwing enough business to his backers–the insurance companies?  Reform should be so good that everyone wants “in.”   Something tells me that Baucus is not offering much if he has to fine the non-participants.   Sounds like our current system where people, mostly for financial reasons, do not buy insurance.   Today, many people say, “OK, I’ll pay the medical bills for my post-college age kid because health insurance premiums are either too high or don’t provide decent coverage.”

In Baucus’ plan, we see he penalizes the victim–adding insult to injury to those people who cannot afford insurance–even with a government subsidy, which will amount to peanuts.  So we make the non-insured pay a fine–and then what?   Do they still go the emergency room of an academic health center hospital to get care?  Will Senator Baucus pay for that?

August 20, 2009

Health care and jobs

The pressures to cut health care costs are enormous, but these cuts can also be a double-edged sword.  Certainly, no one would argue against cutting fraud and overuse.  But at a time when job creation is so important, the health sector is and will be a key player.  These jobs are not just for a broad variety of health care providers, but also for a large range of administrative and management positions.  A recent article points this out by focusing on individuals who cross over from other economic sectors to work in health care.  As health care exceeds one-sixth of the economy and one out of every ten jobs, it becomes increasingly difficult to disentangle needed job growth from excessive health care spending in terms of driving the economy.  This is especially true if there is some kind of health reform that increases access to a substantial number of persons who are currently either uninsured or underinsured.  As we have pointed out in our report, Out of  Order, Out of Time: The State of the Nation’s Health Workforce, we need to gain a more in-depth understanding of the kinds and numbers of health providers that are needed to take care of patients now and in the future.   Perhaps by engaging in this discussion we can address the complex issues around “right-sizing” health care.

July 28, 2009

“Stimulating” health care?

The Stimulus Bill – also know more formally as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) – allocates about $150 billion out of over $780 billion to the health care sector, perhaps the highest percentage devoted to a particular area.  This illustrates, on one level, the importance of health care to the President and Congress, and, on another level, suggests the important economic impact of this investment.  What is the nature of these investments:   Monies for the states to match federal assistance for Medicaid and increased funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), health information technology, and comparative effectiveness research.  Is this money being well spent and are these wise investments?

At a time when almost all the states are struggling with budget deficits, the matching Medicaid funds are most welcome, enabling these states to continue serving those on Medicaid.  As needed as these funds are, they do not fundamentally change the system of care for these patients.  Rather it offers both relief and “more of the same.”

The investment in NIH is important because NIH has in recent years lost real purchasing power as its budget has been relatively flat since the doubling of its budget was completed years ago.  The nation must support its premier biomedical research enterprise for many reasons, including the increasing urgency of such research based on scientific progress and the heavy investments many research-intensive institutions have made in science and scientists to ensure America’s preeminence in biomedical science.

Health information technology has been lagging behind in its development in the U.S. and it is thought that the stimulus dollars may get us over the hump.  While these funds may spur some improvement and adaptation of IT, foster some needed efficiencies, and prevent some medical errors, it is important to note that they do offer for the first time potential financial incentives for IT adoption.  The importance of these incentives reflect the need make the adoption of Health IT both cost-effective and competitively necessary, as seen, for example, by the rapid adoption of IT in the restaurant and the airline industries.

Finally, there is the funding for comparative effectiveness research which will ramp up the effort to demonstrate which therapies and therapeutic approaches are most “effective’”  and thereby improve quality of care and presumably incur some cost savings.  But, as I have noted before, the development of guidelines is not enough (see my post below from July 14th) – there must be ways to directly link best treatments with actual clinical practice, something that is currently lacking.  There is also the problem in effectiveness research of assuring that we can conduct the necessary clinical trials which are the backbone of such research.  We have pointed out the increasing regulatory burden on those who conduct clinical trials and the compelling need for reform in this area.  But I am not aware of any concrete efforts to do so.

The overarching theme of the stimulus package as it relates to health care involves the four concrete areas of Medicaid, NIH, Health IT, and effectiveness research.  But it does not address structural reform of the nation’s health system by, for example, creating pilot projects or other mechanisms to consider fresh options for health care delivery.    Rather it serves to support and bolster trends already underway.  How stimulating is the stimulus?