Tag Archives: congress

Congressional GOP’s Budget Hits Reality Hard

iStock_000007047153XSmall(A version of this Health Alert was published by Real Clear Policy.)

The Congressional Budget Office’s recent budget update revealed a dramatic deterioration in the federal government’s finances. The cumulative deficit over the next ten years, through 2025, is now estimated to add up to $8.5 trillion. Just last August, the number was $7 trillion.

The CBO itself notes that “about half of the $1.5 trillion increase stems from the effects of laws enacted since August.” In other words, this is the work of the 114th Congress, in which Republicans hold the majority in both chambers for the first time in the Obama presidency.

Republican apologists assert that Congress’ powers to shrink the government are limited as long as President Obama is in office. This is true. So, let’s see where Congress can go from here. Continue reading Congressional GOP’s Budget Hits Reality Hard

Bipartisan Medicare Reform: Debt and Deficits, All the Way Down

The extremely flawed so-called Medicare “doc fix” has passed. Its direct consequences include increasing federal government control of the practice of medicine and increasing deficits by at least $141 billion through 2025. However, it also has implications far beyond Medicare’s physician fee schedule, to post-Obamacare reform and general governance. Let’s tackle the fee schedule first. This “doc fix” was promoted as solving the problem that Congress has to increase Medicare’s physician fees at least once a year beyond the rate of growth originally legislated in 1997. If this did not happen, physicians’ fees would drop by about 20 percent, and they would reduce Medicare beneficiaries’ access. This “doc fix” abolishes the 1997 formula in favor of fixed, nominal rates of growth. As a consequence, the fee schedule is not “fixed” in the sense that it is “solved”. It is “fixed” in the sense that Congress has dictated the total amount that will be paid to physicians in future years. It will go up 0.5 percent per year from 2016 through 2019. Then, the amount freezes, and doctors enter a war of all against all, competing against each other for shares of an amount that will inexorably shrink in inflation-adjusted terms. It gets even more bureaucratized after 2025, but there is no point thinking about that because the whole thing is almost certain to unravel before then. Continue reading Bipartisan Medicare Reform: Debt and Deficits, All the Way Down

Insurance Policy Overhead: Congress Is Getting It Wrong Again

The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation issued a staff report on medical loss ratios for individual and group health plans. It has been getting substantial press coverage, all of which suggests that the administrative costs for individual health insurance policies are higher than for large group health insurance policies. The problem is that none of the data in the staff report are sufficient to support this claim.

Continue reading Insurance Policy Overhead: Congress Is Getting It Wrong Again

Congress Can Stay in their Current Health Insurance Plans, Vacation Subsidies for the Poor, and Consumer-Driven Execution?

OPM: Congress won’t have to become uninsured after all. Members and staff can stay in their federal insurance plans until they must join the exchanges to be created in 2014. My advice: Get your surgery done before that date.

About 40 percent of all advanced clinical trials sponsored by the Cancer Institute are never completed. That is an incredible waste of effort and money.

Consumer-Driven Execution. In Utah the condemned can choose: Firing squad or lethal injection. (Need I say what real men would choose?)

Do You Know What Biologics Are?

In 2008, 28 percent of sales from the pharmaceutical industry’s top 100 products came from biologics; by 2014, that share is expected to rise to 50 percent.

Biologic drugs can be more expensive to manufacture; they are grown inside living cells rather than put together chemically, as conventional drugs are. But this does not fully account for their high prices. Another important factor is that they very rarely face competition from generic copies.

Congress is about to change that.

Congress Declares War on HSAs

While Congress has been debating health reform, employers have been creating new consumer-driven plans that lower costs and improve the quality of care. More than half of employers now offer consumer-driven options, including Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and by 2010, nearly 18 million people will be enrolled.

Federal legislation can stop progress in its tracks, however. The Senate proposal, for example, does not directly outlaw HSA-eligible plans; but it restricts HSA options in insidious ways that will delay, deny, defeat and ultimately kill them. 

Continue reading Congress Declares War on HSAs

Tell Me Again About the Definition of Insanity…

This is from Kaiser Health News:

Medicare has conducted hundreds of tests, called pilots or demonstration projects, since the mid-1970s… Most of these experiments haven’t been expanded because they failed a threshold test; they didn’t save money or improve care. Others passed the test but were derailed by objections from hospitals, doctors and other providers — or were caught up in political fights as control of Congress shifted.

So what do the reform bills in Congress promise? Much more of the same.