Many employees must designate a health plan through their employer. These days, as HMOs (health maintenance organizations) and managed care plans continue to proliferate, that means a choice between bad and worse. As employees line up in the lunch-room for a process called open enrollment, they may be surprised to learn that managed care rates have gone up again. The mirage that managed care is cheaper care is finally fading. And, for the first time in years, employees may also have the promise of free choice in medicine in the form of a new method of financing health care.
Consumers are already aware of horror stories involving HMOs, but cheap rates persuaded many that managed care is less expensive. Recent rate hikes are proving otherwise. Many patients must go out of network for crucial care. Co-payments are rising. It’s little wonder why. As HMO executive Randall Crenshaw, chief medical officer for Cari ten Healthcare of Tennessee, recently told the Wall Street Journal, more managed care patients are becoming “frequent fliers;” they over utilize health care and drive costs up.
The deterioration of managed care stems from a basic economic principle: health care subsidized by government and rationed by bureaucrats is doomed to failure. Canada’s socialized medical system, which designates knee replacement an elective, is sending patients scurrying across the border and national health care in the United Kingdom restricts heart transplants to anyone under age 55. Managed care in America is no exception. Congress made health insurance premiums fully tax deductible to employers covering employees’ health care in 1942. This discouraged individuals from buying insurance for themselves and encouraged employers to offer benefits. Eventually, employees came to regard health care as an entitlement provided by the employer.
In 1965, Congress created Medicare. Seniors were forced into the free-for-all of Medicare personal responsibility was replaced by paternalism, and, predictably, unrestricted health care for older Americans lead to frenzy of spending by patients and doctors. Those who had clamored for Medicare argued that, since the state subsidizes seniors’ medical care, the state ought to pay for everyone’s health care. In an act of pragmatism, President Nixon proposed the HMO Act, which Congress passed in 1973. The law gave millions of dollars to HMOs, which, until then, had constituted a small portion of the market. HMOs multiplied rapidly with the new federal giveaways.
Managed care, now including PPOs, mushroomed. Employers initially perceived managed care plans as cheaper than traditional fee-for-service insurance. Gradually, they stopped offering a choice of health plans, making individual policies more expensive. HMOs’ penetration of the industry had been subsidized into existence. Government had instituted managed care.
Today, while overall quality of patient care remains the best in the world, doctors practice medicine in an increasingly intricate web of rationing and regulations: Physicians are stripped of professional autonomy. As patients wander the maze of managed bureaucracy, costs rise and quality deteriorates. Every American dependent on a third party for health coverage is a potential victim of managed care. And state sponsored management of medicine is growing. Last year, Congress and the President increased regulations on the medical profession with the Kennedy Kass ebaum legislation. This year, Congress approved the President’s $24 billion in “kiddie care” state subsidies.
A few politicians (Senators Kennedy and Wellstone), demand national health care on the grounds that health care is a right. Is health care a right The Declaration of Independence protects the inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; it does not guarantee happiness or health care. The right to act in your self-interest and provide necessities for yourself means you have the right to choose. A proper solution adopts and protects this right. Fortunately, Congress has the power to preserve the freedom of choice in medicine: they can vote to expand medical savings accounts (MSAs).
Approved for a limited test last year, MSAs are used in conjunction with high deductible insurance.
Contributions are tax-deductible and money earns interest; funds may be used to cover medical expenses including mental health, vision and dental care tax-free. MSAs, offered by Merrill Lynch, Time Insurance and Wells Fargo, among others, allow employees to boost savings. MSAs offer patients an escape from managed care and put the patient in charge. Currently, the MSA option is restricted to a small group of self-employed, uninsured and small business people and a paltry 390, 000 Medicare recipients. Expanding eligibility for MSAs to all Americans will protect what is left of the right to choose. A “choice” between trying to manage managed care with a plethora of new regulations and government run health care is not a choice, it’s a death sentence.
Congress ought to face the truth about managed care, back off trying to regulate HMOs and give unrestricted free choice in medicine a chance. Four years ago, fears of faceless federal bureaucrats making important medical decisions sunk the Clinton administration’s national health insurance initiative. Today, many Americans find their medical decisions are being made by faceless bureaucrats of a different sort. These bureaucrats represent managed care health plans instead of the government. Once celebrated as forward-thinking, super-efficient organizations that would put a needed squeeze on doctor and hospital bills, HMOs and other managed-care plans are enduring a wicked backlash, frequently accused of irresponsible and potentially dangerous penny-pinching at the expense of patients stripped of medical options they once took for granted. In 1996, about 60 percent of Americans were enrolled in some sort of managed care health plan (the most common of which are health maintenance organizations, or HMOs, and preferred provider organizations, or PPOs).
That’s up from 36 percent in 1992. The increase is due in large part to employers shifting their workers away from the traditional an considerably more expensive “fee-for-service” health insurance plans. (About 16 percent of Americans have no health insurance at all. ) Candidates in 1998 responded to public furor against managed care with proposals establishing certain “patients’ rights.” Both parties are promising action on the issue, but Republicans and Democrats are offering different prescriptions.
Legislation Both parties claim they support the idea of codifying what people should get from their health plans, and polls show that no other action by Congress would be as welcomed by the American people. Driving the debate on the issue is a Democratic proposal that would establish “patients’ rights” to: Appeal denials of services and benefits by a health plan to an outside body; Access a specialist when needed; Use doctors outside the plan (for a larger fee); Use emergency services if the symptoms justify alarm, even if the problem proves not to be a genuine emergency; Get an understandable explanation of coverage rules; Sue an employer-sponsored health plan for damages. Senate Republicans killed this plan in October, saying that while they too favor patients’ rights, the emocratic bill called for too much regulation and would have made HMOs too vulnerable to lawsuits. Democrats vowed to fight for the bill again in 1999. The Industry All this comes when the managed care industry is struggling. Many health care plans held their rates at unprofitable levels during a long industry price war in an attempt to grab market share.
Now they want to increase their profitability, analysts say. However, they have already reaped the easy savings by squeezing payments to doctors and hospitals. Other ways of saving money further reducing hospital stays, restricting patients’ access to specialists and expensive medical tests, limiting patients’ choice of physicians are ones patients are coming to hate. The Change in Patient Care Most Americans used to have fee-for-service health insurance, where patients can choose their medical service provider and the insurance company pays a percentage of the fees, after a deductible. This creates various financial incentives: for patients, to see a doctor only when absolutely necessary; for doctors, to provide more tests and treatments rather than less.
In managed care, patients pay vastly reduced fees to see their “primary physician” but they can’t see specialists or other medical service providers without their primary physician’s approval. For patients, the financial incentive encourages casual doctor visits for such things as preventive care, but makes it almost impossible to choose medical options not approved by the primary physician. And for doctors, watched over by plan accountants, the incentive encourages minimum tests, referrals and hospitalizations. Both systems have their advantages, and no consensus exists among medical researchers about whether consumers are being served better or worse in the managed care environment than they were in fee-for-service.