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POLICY: Slackers of the zeros

Men Not Working, and Not Wanting Just Any Job and if you parse the article, it’s the employment-based health care system that has many of them stuck in this rut—many are on disability waiting for Medicare to kick in. They won’t take a job that doesn’t have health benefits. But of course they’re not officially unemployed because they’re not officially looking for work. (That’s a trick Reagan learned from Thatcher BTW)

Just another drip drip drip on the road to the big reform debate in a few years…

 

TECH/INDUSTRY: Case the Revolutionary

A long and detailed story about Steve Case and Revolution Health is up on Bloomberg.com. It was kind of weird, I vaguely thought I recognized some stuff  in it, then found myself being quoted. Then I remembered that I’d been interviewed about it ages ago by the author Bob Van Voris. If I remember rightly I was mostly grouchy about the name. I mean, they may turn out to be good businesses, but is what he’s doing Revolutionary?

POLICY: More wonking around in Medicare risk

This is interesting, and sadly I don’t have the time tonight to do much more than point at a couple of things written. The first is a new brief by Cato’s Michael Cannon. Remember kids, he wants Medicare to go to total cash accounts (although to be fair, within some stipulations). What he does not want is P4P in mainstream Medicare (which I and the rest of the wishwashy centrists do want in some form or other). In his new piece Pay-for-Performance: Is Medicare a Good Candidate? Michael says:

Medicare, the federal health care program for the elderly and disabled, has begun experimenting with provider-focused P4P incentives. Yet Medicare faces additional challenges beyond those confronting private third-party purchasers. Given Medicare’s patient population, size, and sensitivity to interest group lobbying, any harm that could result from a P4P scheme would be more likely to occur within traditional Medicare than elsewhere in the health care system.

And in that he’s clearly right. In my perfect (or slightly less rotten) P4P world, providers would have to be incented somehow to do the right thing. I think that it’s a choice between that or just tossing them all the (limited amount of) money and telling them to get on with it, but there’d be no more money (fixed budget) and you’d have to cover everyone (universal coverage)—then they’d get into organizations that figure out how to do that (e.g. a mixed single payer/kaiser model).

In the real world, however—and this is the thing Cannon fears—anything that’s introduced into the current Medicare system will be gamed, possibly to death, by the providers—especially if Congress couldn’t hold firm on turning back on the spigot of funding (which both I and Michael think is unlikely) in the face of grannies mobilized by the AMA et al. After all they’re not showing much resolve now! Presumably cannon thinks that the MSA/HSA baby would be thrown out with the P4P bathwater.

So Cannon would rather than any of the P4P nonsense be kept in that minority program, Medicare Advantage, while the real solution (form his end) of mandated Medicare cash accounts—the end of social insurance—out of which recipients would have to buy HDHPs, gets introduced to the main FFS program, and also snuck into the Medicare Advantage program, which you may know is currently flush with cash to give away (or at least is handing out gym memberships and other goodies) because it enrolls healthier than average people. I assume Cannon thinks that there’s be enough cash for the private plans to start up MSA/HSAs there and get the whole thing rolling.

Congress can realize the potential of provider-focused P4P incentives, while reducing the likelihood of harm, by confining provider-focused P4P to private Medicare Advantage plans and by encouraging greater participation in those plans. Further, P4P financial incentives can be targeted at patients as well as providers. Patient-focused financial incentives would offer greater transparency and allow patients and their doctors to deviate from treatment guidelines when doing so is in the patient’s interest.

So private plans hand out money, and as long as P4P doesn’t foul up the overall reform bathwater, the market can work for Medicare. I personally think that this is all rather academic, but then again I never thought the US would be stupid enough to invade Iraq….so this might happen in one guise or another.

But there is one little point that this all runs into, if we are expecting Medicare Advantage to introduce the private market through the back door either in the form of HMOs or as Cannon wants in the, to-come-soon-unless-the-Dems-win-the-house in 06, MSAs for Medicare. And of course this isn’t my idea, it’s been sent in by an understandably anonymous wonk working for a big private insurer.

Our health plan that was moving forward with plans to offer a MA MSA so we got involved in auditing our MSA modeling and projections. I will be very interested in seeing if any MA plans actually decide to offer a Medicare MSA. The risk adjustment makes it very difficult for the math to work out. You assume that the enrollees are the younger aged beneficiaries (65 to possibly 70) probably not originally disabled or institutionalized, and by law not currently on medicaid and almost certainly not on medicaid the year before. This means that using the new enrollee risk score your at ~ a  0.54 to 0.65 average risk score for your plan. The real risk for these people may be much better than that (i would hope so if they are choosing this product – depending on where they live if they anticipate having any real medical costs then they are better off buying a Plan F medsupp plan) This does not get reflected in the first year of enrollment into medicare (any plan doing this better be damn sure that all of the dx data is successfullly getting to CMS’s system) So one potential area where the health plan would make money off of this is the initial difference between the new enrollee score and the "real" risk score. Once the payment is based on their actual experience the risk scores could be as low as 0.3-0.5 The amount that you have to offer as a deposit in the MSA for it to be attractive to people ends up being large part of the payment with less and less left over for the high deductible premium and admin/margin for the health plan.  This has been an option for a while and I don’t see how the tweaks they have made for their "demonstration" really make it more viable – offering more benefits before the deductible? Having deductible/coinsurance/OOP max option and adding a network option? Possibly tiering deposits for risk levels – but that seems very operationally difficult. In general I just don’t see how with risk adjustment this plan works. I wonder if whoever is trying to push these plans has really gone through the math with risk adjustment and thought about whether this seems that reasonable. The MSA/HSA idea would have worked much better before risk adjustment – but the whole point of moving to a fully risk adjusted system was to minimize the sort of cherry picking that this plan is tailor made to produce.

The other bizarre thing to me is the idea of paying private health insurance plans (more than it would cost under regular FFS Medicare) to offer a FFS plan. If there is such a demand for different benefit structures while using the same reimbursement and essentially the same medical management as FFS medicare why doesn’t CMS just offer it themselves.  I seem to recall that the genesis of PFFS plans was some rural senator’s wife wanting to be able to have a M+C plan.

What we do know is what happens if payment rates in the private side on Medicare Advantage fall because, say, Congress gets some cojones about the deficit. The private sector bales out—we saw that movie in the late 1990s. I suspect that risk adjustment is about to be the re-reun of it, which will probably mean going back to square one. And I suspect square one is command and control price cuts in P4P clothing.

But I’m not quite sure what the connection between that and Medicare MSA/HSAs is in Cannon’s mind, other than they’re both reforms that providers will try to strangle at birth. Of course perhaps that means that I should read more than his press release! So I’ll reserve judgment till I do!

TECH: LinuxWorld – Healthcare Day

For those of you who believe in Open Source at LinuxWorld  in San Francisco on Aug 15 there is a Healthcare Day. Sometime THCB commenter and contributor Fred Trotter is on at 2pm running a panel on innovation.

POLICY/HEALTH PLANS/PHARMA: Part D–a tale of two headlines

Most Beneficiaries Enrolled in Medicare Rx Benefit Satisfied With Drug Plan, Nearly Two in 10 Experienced Major Problem, Study Finds

or if you prefer

Poll shows 80% of those enrolled in Medicare drug plan satisfied

So go ahead and guess which headline came from a non-profit foundation’s news service and which one was from the inhouse newsletter for the trade group for health plans, which of course run the biggest Medicare PDP (Part D plans).

So when is a series of problems not a problem? Apparently if you don’t care much about consumer problems.

34%, of seniors who have used their drug plans have experienced what they perceived as problems, including 18% who described them as "major" problems and 16% who described them as "minor" problems. The experiences cited as problems included having unexpected costs, not being able to fill a prescription at the pharmacy, not receiving an enrollment card and having to change medications because a prescription is not covered. Ninety percent of seniors who experienced minor problems and 55% who experienced major problems feel the issues were resolved satisfactorily. (my emphasis)

So by my math 9% of Part D recipients have had major unresolved problems. Most consumer companies would freak out if they had that level of unsatisfied customers.

But don’t worry, for the $600 billion over 9 years (or whatever mythical number we’re now being quoted is the cost of Part D) that the taxpayer is spending, we’re sure saving all those recipients lots of cash right? Well not quite all—in fact not even most!

Of seniors who have used their Medicare drug plans, 46% say they are saving money on prescription drug costs, while 34% say they are paying about the same as before the drug benefit and 17% say they are paying more.

Oh well, at least the people who the bill was designed to help are benefiting. On Tuesday the NY Times told us that:

The summer revival in the pharmaceutical industry continued as Merck and Schering-Plough, two major American drug makers, reported second-quarter profits yesterday that were well ahead of analysts’ expectations. Medicare Part D, which offers prescription coverage for people over 65, is fueling the profits, as drug makers benefit from new prescriptions and somewhat higher prices for medicines, Wall Street analysts say. The number of prescriptions has risen 3 percent this year, and growth accelerated in June to more than 5 percent, according to a report from Merrill Lynch. Eventually, Part D could fuel a political reaction if prices continue to rise, but analysts expect the industry’s influence in Washington will delay any changes for years.

And the taxpayer isn’t getting screwed any more than they were going to be already in Part D are they? Well there’s this little nugget too

Overall prescriptions are also increasing, according to data from Citigroup and Merrill Lynch. For the year, total prescriptions in the United States are up about 3 percent, but they accelerated in June, rising 5.4 percent over the previous June. Drug makers have also increased prices for many popular drugs and are paying rebates to the private insurers who run the Medicare Part D program that are lower than the 15 percent rebates they paid to Medicaid.

Well at least the market is working—of course Adam Smith might not notice this as being the kind of free market he was thinking about.

HEALTH PLANS: And just in case the pro-Kaiser bias is getting out of hand

Now that we’ve let Pat Salber be so nice to Kaiser, Gadlfy reminds me about a couple of things.

First a lost laptop apparently filched out of Oakland HQ with a mere 160,000 patients’ details on it. They were fined $200K by Dept of Managed Care for putting 150 names on the Internet, so proportionally this one should come in around the gross national product of Belgium!

And then much more dirt about the kidney transplant disaster–including the reason that the story broke. The whistleblower went to the press and the authorities including the LA Times. It was the LA Times series on Kaiser’s kidney transplant program that made the brown stuff hit the whirling metal thing. And what’s worse is that they still have not have had the no-holds barred public enquiry that they ought to allow and that I called for when it happened—mostly (according to Chris Rauber in the SF Business Times) apparently out of fear that it’ll upset the Permanente Group.

I half expect several commenters to (again) question how Robbie Pearl’s father really died. But the point is that the EMR KP is introducing is capable of massively improving care quality. But it’s a necessary but not sufficient condition.

Meanwhile, there are also allegations that the non-profit guys (Blue Shield and Kaiser) are joining the real schlockmeister behavior of retroactively cancelling patient policies—the ones that Wellpoint’s Blue Cross unit is in hot water for doing. No examples about KP, although there is one for Blue Shield, who’s underwriting is pretty tough these days.

So as everything in health care, there are two sides to the story. It would be very nice if KP made more of an effort to be open about this–I still think a full external inquiry into the Kidney transplant fiasco would be much better for them (and for health care as a whole) than us all having to read the tea-leaves via the unfair dismisall case….but the politics of KP as a whole are very delicate and I understand why they won’t do it. I don’t agree with that policy but I understand its genesis

HEALTH PLANS/PHYSICIANS/TECH:Health care, the way it should be (or How to stop worrying and learn to love the bomb), by Pat Salber

Pat Salber writes The Doctor Weighs In. She is a doc, an ex-med director at California blue shield, and a Kaiser Permanente member. And she loves them. This is why, and it’s quite an advertorial for Kaiser and an indictment of how everyone else does it. So if this becomes the standard, and people find out about it (and with $80m of advertising budget a year behind it, they will find out) can the rest of the US system compete?

Health care, the way it should be or  (How to stop worrying and learn to love the bomb)

By PAT SALBER

I have to tell you again about what great health care I get from Kaiser Permanente Northern Cal. Drhealth (Yeah, I know, they screwed up on the transplant service).  But, they are doing a lot of the things we, the wonks, have been hollering about for years.  Read this.

Sunday night I noticed new “floaters” in the right visual field of my right eye.  They were different from the run of the mill floaters – those little dark circles — most of us have.  These were like long lines and they only moved on the right side of the visual field.  The next day, I started having sparkling lights, again in the right visual field.  Now, even an emergency physician knows this could indicate a retinal detachment (serious indeed).  So mid-afternoon, when I had convinced myself it would be stupid to miss my own diagnosis, I called KP.  The woman on the phone in the opthalmology department clearly had been trained.  When I talked about the sparkles, she put me on hold and got a nurse. 

The nurse tried her best to get me in the same day.  She had an appointment available, but being rush hour, there was no way I could make it. She carefully went over the symptoms of retinal detachment and compared them to what I was experiencing.  Together we decided it was OK to wait until the next am for an appointment.  She carefully explained that if certain symptoms occurred (e.g., a sensation of a curtain coming down over the eye), that I needed to go to the emergency department right away as that could indicate a retinal detachment.

The next day (today) I showed up at the opthalmology department.  The receipt I was given for my $15 co-pay listed the dates I had had all of my age/gender specific  preventive services and the dates the next ones were due.

There was no wait to see the doctor.  I was put in an eye exam room and saw a nurse right away.  She explained everything she was going to do.  She anesthetized my corneas,  she tested my vision (with glasses and with pinholes), she used the slit lamp to look at the corneal surface, and then she put in drops to dilate my eyes.

After about 15 minutes (waiting for the eyes to dilate), Dr. Prusiner, chief of the department came in to see me (he is the brother of Stan Prusiner, the Nobel Prize winner who discovered prions).  He did a very thorough exam of both retinas using a variety of techniques.  He explained that I had a vitreous detachment (annoying, but otherwise, no big deal).  He showed me a color picture of an eye with a vitreous detachment.  He answered all of my questions.  He did  not seem rushed (because the nurse had done a lot of the early work for him).

We were finished, he gave me a  4 x 6 piece of paper with his name, his photo and the URL of his home page.  Here’s the link  so you can see how nice it is.  This is, I think, the new KP Connect.  It also showed all of the stuff (by major categories) that he had on his home page.  He wrote down the diagnosis “vitreous detachment” on the paper and drew an arrow from it to name of the link where I would find the information he had chosen for his patients to read about this condition. He urged me to read it.  I went on the site, found the condition, and, lo and behold, everything he told me was what was on the site.

He then told me, in detail, what symptoms would require me to call or go to the ER right away.  But he assured me that the symptoms represented complications highly unlikely to occur.

By the way, he said as I was leaving.  Be sure to make an appointment with the optometrist.  I think we can improve the correction of your left eye.

I challenge you to find one single thing you would want that I didn’t get.  This is the way health care should be.

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