Massachusetts Governor Says U.S. Health Plan Must Cut Costs
Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick
said U.S. government efforts to overhaul health care won’t be
able to follow his state’s blueprint for universal coverage
unless costs are controlled at the same time.
Unlike the Massachusetts plan, which focused first on
getting residents to sign up for insurance and only now is
turning to cost containment, federal legislation must include
measures to trim medical costs if it wants to garner and keep
public support, Patrick said in an interview today in Boston.
The 2006 Massachusetts law, with its combination of public
and private insurance programs, has reduced the number of
uninsured to 2.6 percent of its population, the lowest rate in
the nation, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. At the same
time, per capita health spending in Massachusetts is projected
to double from 2009 through 2020, according to a June report by
the state. The Massachusetts plan has served as a template for
President Barack Obama’s federal overhaul effort
“We did access before costs,” Patrick, 53, said. A federal
plan “will have to do it at the same time.”
Patrick said he has been in close contact with the White
House and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
during the health-care overhaul push, advising them on how to
“engage the private market and get them to play fair,” the
governor said.
Because of costs, Massachusetts hasn’t solved the problem
of guaranteeing access to health care. Even residents with
coverage can’t afford medical treatment because of co-payments
and the charges that insurance doesn’t cover, according to a
September 2009 report by the Kaiser Family Foundation with
headquarters in Menlo Park, California.
Rising Premiums
Private insurance premiums in the state rose more than 12
percent through the end of 2008, according to an Oct. 21 report
in the New England Journal of Medicine co-authored by
Massachusetts Health and Human Services Secretary JudyAnn Bigby.
The cost of buying insurance increased 10 percent so far this
year, the report said.
Price increases like these put pressure on the finances of
businesses that provide insurance to employees, workers who pay
part of that cost and individuals who buy their own coverage.
“President Obama is a visionary and he’s going to use
Massachusetts as an example of how his ideas might play out,”
said Regina Herzlinger, an economist at Harvard Business School
in Cambridge. “But Massachusetts is a wealthy state and it can
afford things that other states cannot. And even now
Massachusetts is having trouble.”
The state reduced subsidies for coverage of 31,000 legal
immigrants to help close the state’s budget deficit, cutting out
certain services and increasing co-pays for some.
Can’t Be ‘Scaled Up’
Patrick said he doesn’t know whether the Massachusetts
model can simply be “scaled up” as a national plan.
“We had advantages,” he said. “We had a relatively small
uninsured population. The impact on the budget is different.
They may need something more aggressive.”
Massachusetts is now beginning to tackle cost. In July a
commission recommended the state consider moving to a system
that would bundle medical costs on a per capita basis rather
than have providers charge for each service.
That proposal has already met with criticism from experts
such as Herzlinger who point out that California had
“disastrous” results with that payment model in the 1990s.
“Payment reform will move gradually -- emphasis on the
gradual,” Patrick said. The one exception may be an attempt to
mitigate cost problems plaguing small businesses by allowing
them to pool risks and perhaps reduce premiums, he said.
Public Option Supported
The governor said he supports a public option similar to
what is being discussed by Congress. The public option proposal
to create a U.S. plan to compete with private insurers can help
lower costs, he said.
To achieve a 97.4 percent coverage rate, Massachusetts
required all residents over the age of 19 to purchase insurance,
if “affordable” coverage was available, or face a $912 tax
penalty.
The state expanded MassHealth, the state’s Medicaid
program, to cover children living at 300 percent of the federal
poverty level, and started Commonwealth Care, a subsidized
insurance plan for low-income adults who individually earned
less than $32,508 a year or $66,168 for a family of four in
2009.
The state also created the Commonwealth Health Insurance
Connector, an exchange offering individuals and small businesses
access to less expensive private insurance options.
The system is complex, and “residents with fluctuating
incomes and employment statuses can fall through the cracks,”
even though they would still qualify for subsidies to help pay
for insurance, the Kaiser Family report said.
“While health reform is very popular in Massachusetts,
there’s no doubt cost is on everyone’s mind,” Patrick said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Pat Wechsler in New York at
pwechsler@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 28, 2009 15:13 EDT