Affordable Care Act: Affordable for whom?

Entering its third annual open enrollment period, Obamacare is the subject of cacophonous political acrimony, again, championed by its supporters and vilified by its opponents. Each side presents its own “metrics” of success or failure, echoing the great Irish conservative Edmund Burke that, “In ascending order of treachery come lies, damned lies and statistical lies.” How apt a quotation when the Obama administration is now urging people to sign up for The Affordable Care Act, lauding the low premiums now available on the law’s new marketplaces. The President himself has said most Americans can find an option that costs less than $75 a month. The Secretary of Health and Human Services reaffirmed this promise saying 8 out of 10 returning customers will be able to buy a plan with premiums less than $100 a month after tax credits. Given the statistic that the medically uninsured rate in the United States has fallen from 15.7% to 9.2% since the law was enacted, it seems Obamacare has lived up to its hype.

 

Except the true cost of health insurance comprises not just a front-end monthly premium, but a back-end combination of deductibles and copays paid by the patient whenever the insurance is utilized. In many states, more than half the plans offered through the federal online marketplace have a yearly deductible of $3,000 or more. Median deductibles are actually greater in Miami, FL ($5,000), Jackson, MS ($5,500), Chicago, IL ($3,400) and Phoenix, AZ ($4,000). Granted, these are the Federal markets, not Medicaid expanded, income-sensitive state plans where financially needy participants can get cost-sharing reductions. Still, the Kaiser Family Foundation avows that average employer-sponsored plans have annual deductibles of only $1,320 for individual coverage. These sky-high back end patient financial outlays are making many consumers feel just as vulnerable as they were before they had coverage. Paradoxically, people can afford to have insurance, but cannot afford to actually use it.

 

These high deductibles are not just the avaricious pricing of the insurers participating in the marketplace. The sustainability of Obamacare is predicated on mandatory universal coverage providing large pools of younger and healthier people with little medical need to offset the health resource utilization of the debilitated and elderly. The costs to the insurance industry are reflective of the health profile of the composite insurees. The initial pricing system was, by necessity, guess work. After two years of accumulating real data, the insurance companies could and should better formulate a business model reflective of the healthcare needs and costs of their customers. There is pressure to keep premiums down, but if that does not pay for care actually rendered, then the difference has to be made up at the point of service with copays and deductibles. Ergo, the patients have to bear more of the financial burden than the low premiums they were quoted. Given this scenario and the recently released data that health spending grew 5.3% in 2014, the largest jump since 2007, and that this accelerated growth far exceeded that of GDP, the true “affordability” of the Affordable Care Act is not a faite accomplie, but a work in progress.

By Norman Silverman, MD, with Ryan McKennon, DO and Ren Carlton

 

Cutting Healthcare Spending - Big Data, Hospital Costs, and Outcomes

According to the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), inpatient hospital costs account for nearly 30% of healthcare spending in the United States and are increasing by about 2% per year over inflation. This cost issue is a focus of the Affordable Care Act, which is accelerating the move away from fee-for-service to a single, diagnosis-related comprehensive payment, similar to Medicare reimbursement. Such payment systems punish unnecessary testing, prolonged hospitalization, and readmissions.

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I strongly suggest that a pledge to read a synopsis of the philosophy of the 13th century Franciscan William of Ockham on a weekly basis be inserted in the oath of office taken by every government employee. Clearly highlighted should be his nominalist doctrine, Ockham’s razor, which avows that the best solution to a problem is usually the simplest. Pare to a minimum the number of confounding variables.

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Drowning in the Fountain of Youth - Genetic Predisposition

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Yelp May Not Help

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Find and Replace: Genetic Engineering in Science and Medicine

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HIPAA Protects Millions with Unintended Consequences

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Studies Prove Communication and Teambuilding Training a MUST for Surgical And Hospital Staff

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We are regaled in the lay press about new medical breakthroughs a novel cholesterol-lowering drug mimics the effects of a genetic mutation and improves lipid profiles when conventional treatment is ineffective; new cancer therapies are tailored medications designed to specifically attack tumor cells without the nonspecific toxicity of conventional chemotherapy; hepatitis C can be cured by short-term oral agents, not prolonged courses of parenteral infusions; mitral valves can be repaired percutaneously without the potential risks of extracorporeal circulation.

How to Grow Your Medical Practice Online

Here at Michigan Physicians Society, we’re dedicated to the financial betterment of physicians by providing continuing education and technology, along with an extensive network of other like-minded professionals in our space....
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