We Need a Public Option
Dear Friend, Neighbor, & Constituent,
America spends twice per
capita on health what any other nation in the world spends. The reason
for our perpetuated inefficiencies is that we have a lack of political
will to pass legislation that would bring our nation in line with the
rest of the world, offering universal health insurance coverage while
reducing healthcare as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from
nineteen percent closer to the eight to twelve percent of GDP that
characterizes healthcare expenditures around most of the rest of the
world.
Healthcare doesn’t
require “common sense solutions” though; quite to the contrary
healthcare policy is quite complicated. And though “Medicare for All”
might be a simple enough concept to understand that would do a great
deal for our nation in its attempt to control healthcare costs, the
current national political climate and the dysfunction of the Congress
clearly make such a proposal an impossible dream.
Instead states must take
the initiative and seek to move towards universal health insurance
coverage as a means of controlling costs. This counter-intuitive concept
stems from our current system of de-facto universal health insurance
coverage through hospital emergency rooms (as a result of a federal law
passed in 1986 known as EMTALA). In Maryland this is especially true
because of our unique in the nation all payer rate setting system.
Essentially, as a result of an uninsured individual getting shot and
being taken to a hospital emergency department, the State of Maryland
increases the prices for everything in that hospital from hip
replacements to labor and delivery. Private health insurers like
CareFirst, United, Aetna, and Kaiser Permanente subsequently increase
premiums for policyholders across the state, passing on the cost of the
increased prices to us. All the while these hospitals (46 of 47
hospitals in Maryland are non-profit) and health insurance companies
(whose executives are paid millions) are exempt from paying corporate
income taxes due to their non-profit status supposedly because they
provide the equivalent of five percent of their annual revenues in
community benefits, which is overwhelmingly accounted for by the same
uncompensated care that leads to increases in their compensation. In
sum, everyone in Maryland already pays for an inefficient, ineffective,
and inequitable form of universal health insurance coverage.
To address ballooning
healthcare costs (premiums in Maryland have increased on average by
fifty percent in the past four years) and to move us closer to universal
health insurance coverage, Maryland needs to adopt a “Public Option”
that would function as a state-run Health Maintenance Organization
(HMO). This Public Option would be created as an opt-in, means-tested
Medicaid expansion plan. It would create a nearly two million person
risk pool by incorporating traditional Medicaid, the individual and
small business exchanges, and by requiring that a half million public
employees in Maryland receive coverage through this Public Option.
The moral and financial
benefits would be immediate. By pooling risk across one-third of
Maryland’s population, including Maryland’s public workforce, more
healthy people who need less care will be subsidizing proportionally
fewer unwell individuals who require more costly care. The Public Option
will also be in a position to leverage its purchasing power to
negotiate down the prices of prescription drugs and medical devices. It
will benefit from lower administrative costs associated with publicly
administered plans (as an example, Medicare has an average
administrative overhead of three percent and CareFirst has an overhead
cost of about eighteen percent). The Public Option will gain from
economies of scale, further reducing healthcare costs. And the creation
of this Public Option will create an opportunity for Maryland to expand
its all payer rate setting program from hospitals to all settings of
care, thus eliminating pricing variability across the state and
achieving savings that have been proven to accrue over the nearly five
decades that the all payer rate setting system has been in place in
Maryland.
Marylanders of any
income level would be able to buy into this Public Option at a fair
price for their income level, thus making this plan financially
self-sustaining. No federal funds would be required to create this
Public Option because it would not be a true Medicaid expansion plan and
therefore all authority for administering this plan would be regulated
by the State of Maryland. The Public Option would create contracts with
individual providers just as any insurance company does and its network
could include many of the same providers who currently take other forms
of health insurance. Perhaps some of these providers could be taken on
as direct employees who only service Public Option beneficiaries,
thereby moving Maryland towards a high-value publically administered
integrated care delivery model a la Kaiser Permanente.
Those public employees
who would prefer to seek coverage through a traditional insurer would be
welcome to do by purchasing a plan directly through a private insurer.
An analogy can be made between this situation and that facing
individuals who prefer to pay for their children to attend private
schools. Those who opt to send their children to private school in
Maryland still pay property taxes for the public school system and can,
at any time, place their child in the public school system at no
additional cost to them. Essentially those parents are paying private
school tuition on top of the costs of funding public schools that they
pay by virtue of their residency in Maryland. Just so, the Public Option
would be available to public employees at no additional cost as a
benefit associated with their employment, but at any time they could
choose to buy a private plan on the open market.
A Public Option would
provide comprehensive baseline healthcare with no carve-outs for mental,
optical, or dental care. It would provide coverage for every part of
your body and would be adequate to provide decent care to all at a lower
cost to society than the status quo. We can no longer morally afford to
allow the uninsured and underinsured to languish in a wealthy society
and we can no longer financially afford the burgeoning cost of
healthcare and its insatiable appetite for swallowing resources that
might otherwise be applied to other worthy causes in our society. The
time is ripe for the creation of a Public Option in Maryland.
Regards,
Jordan Cooper
Jordan Cooper
