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![]() ![]() Wall Street Comes to WashingtonMarket Watchers and Policy Analysts Evaluate the Health Care MarketIssue Brief No. 54
Goodbye, $10 Copayments
In recent years, insured consumers have largely been shielded from rapidly rising health care costs. And thanks to managed care’s more generous benefit structure, many people have grown accustomed to $5 or $10 copayments for services. With a weaker economy and a more uncertain job market, employers will try to increase workers’ awareness of health care costs by raising deductibles and copayments and, perhaps, greater application of coinsurance, which requires patients to pay a percentage of the bill rather than a fixed-dollar amount, panelists agreed. Unlike fixed-dollar copayments, coinsurance automatically increases the amount the patient pays when prices rise. Employers should resist the urge to increase workers’ share of insurance premium contributions because such a move might tempt younger and healthier workers to decline employer-sponsored coverage. "I think premium sharing is a very dangerous tool. It’s simple for an employer to use, but it leads to tremendous adverse selection in the risk pool," Goodman said. Increased consumer cost sharing could produce a consumer backlash, said Robert Reischauer, Ph.D., president of The Urban Institute. Increasing the cost burden on people who use more health care services through higher deductibles, coinsurance or copayments "will in fact become a political issue, and there will be a backlash," he warned. Along with digging deeper into their pockets, consumers also are likely to have fewer health plan choices as employers reduce the number of health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and other plans offered to workers. Employers will try to focus their "business on the plans that have the largest market share, the lowest unit cost and the slowest [cost] trends," said Joe France, director of equity research at Credit Suisse First Boston. Tightly Managed Care Comes Undone Conference moderator and HSC President Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., predicted higher premium increases for more tightly managed plans "because they are being affected more by the loosening, as opposed to the plans that have traditionally been more loosely managed and haven’t had to give up as much." France concurred, noting that more tightly managed plans, especially HMOs, are seeing bigger increases in underlying medical costs. "The big rate increases—the 20 and 25 percent numbers—are companies going from a very tightly managed program," he said. Insurers Roll Out New Products But many employers are skeptical about consumer-driven plans, which are sometimes called defined contribution plans, because cost savings may be elusive, France said. He cited the example of Hallmark where about 4,000 of the greeting card firm’s 11,000 employees fail to reach their deductibles in a given year, essentially costing the firm nothing."Under a defined contribution plan, I guess you’re sending them to the gym or something," he said. Health plans and employers have rapidly expanded the use of tiered-benefit structures for prescription drugs, giving consumers financial incentives in the form of lower copayments to use generic and preferred name-brand drugs. But insurer experimentation with tiered hospital and physician networks—which require patients to pay more out of pocket if they use more expensive providers—has progressed more slowly. Insurers’ strategy for tiered provider networks is to "continue to offer broad provider choice but shift some of the cost of that onto consumers," said Cara S. Lesser, HSC senior health researcher and director of site visits. The tiers are based primarily on cost, but some plans are trying to include quality measures in the equation, she noted. Plans initially believed tiered networks would help stabilize stormy provider relationships, but the opposite has occurred as providers protested placement in the higher-cost tier. "Ironically, these products that plans viewed as a way to appease providers are now meeting a great deal of provider resistance," Lesser said, adding that Blue Cross of California recently abandoned tiered networks after hospitals protested. With no basis for tiering other than cost and limited ability to assess quality, France predicted an uphill battle for tiered networks. Hospitals Gain Upper Hand
Faced with Medicare and Medicaid payment squeezes, hospitals have fought for higher rates from private managed care plans. Hospitals "engaged in really stupid pricing during the mid-1990s," thinking they could make up lower average prices with increased volume, Goodman said. Much of the push for higher payments is a result of hospitals "trying to get rates to more rational levels." However, some hospital systems—especially those with local market oligopoly or monopoly situations—have engaged in "fairly egregious behavior," she said. "There needs to be a reaction from employers, and the employer needs to be able to say, ’I’m going to make a tough decision. This hospital may be prominent in the market, but it’s simply too expensive, and we’re going to allow the plan to cut it out.’" Aggressive hospitals also could face antitrust scrutiny, Goodman predicted, to see whether hospital systems came together to use their "market power to push prices and, therefore, harm consumers." Disease Management, Where Are You?
Reischauer, however, said disease management efforts are more likely to improve the quality of care than reduce costs. Disease management "will save some money, but the idea that this is the silver bullet and it’s going to substantially lower the trend of cost growth is largely wishful thinking." Noting that research shows that about "30 percent of care is either inappropriate, outright harmful or unnecessary," Goodman said that moving medical practice to a sounder evidence base is "one of the areas in the delivery of medicine in this country that is just crying out for improvement." Premiums Stay Ahead of Costs
"The problem for the [insurers] is that they don’t know what their costs are until they’ve already priced the business, and we certainly know that there’s going to be more pressure on them as an industry," France said. Using Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan margins as a proxy for the private commercial market, France said the plans have some of the highest profit margins in years. "They’re not as high as they’ve ever been, but they’re certainly getting up there, and that’s usually not a prescription for a rosy outlook for the insurance industry," he said. A New Medical Arms Race?
"We see this phenomenon as a return to medical-arms-race-type behavior, competing for those high-end services," Lesser said. While many hospitals are upgrading or building new facilities, Ed Shapoff, a vice president at Goldman Sachs who specializes in providing construction capital for nonprofit hospitals, said hospitals don’t have much excess cash to make "foolish investments" in new facilities. "They don’t always make the right decisions, but I don’t think we’re seeing the same buildup in the form of an arms race," he said. "They’re taking an honest look at what they think their mission is and the population base they serve, and they’re trying to provide an appropriate range of services." But Goodman said a focus on high-profit cardiac care will crowd out investment in "mission-critical" services like burn centers, which tend to lose money. The result will be too many cardiac beds and too few burn centers. William J. Scanlon, Ph.D., director of health care issues at the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), pointed out that hospitals have to balance meeting the needs of current patients and being ready to meet the treatment needs of tomorrow’s patients. "As we put pressure in terms of costs on hospitals—and some entrepreneurs have found ways to split off services that are potentially more profitable—we are potentially threatening...the capacity to serve demand in the future, and it’s something we need to be concerned about." Technology advances also will affect the need for hospital investment in bricks and mortar, and "you don’t want to invest a whole lot in facilities that turn out to be unneeded," Reischauer said. "This seems to argue for some kind of regional planning rather than allowing all of these decisions to be made individually by competing hospitals." Slower Rise in Drug Spending
Many employers are increasing copayments, moving to coinsurance and adding deductibles for drug coverage, France said, characterizing these moves as "straightforward cost shifting to workers." And some employers are looking at mandating use of generic drugs and eliminating coverage of name-brand drugs. Even as drug copayments and other cost-shifting techniques increase, consumers’ out-of-pocket costs are still relatively modest. "If you’re paying a $10 copay for a drug, that’s basically the cost of going to a movie... And moving that from $10 to $20 to $30 or $35, again, that’s not a huge amount of money in the context of most people’s budgets," Little Hope for Medicare+Choice
France predicted more health plans would withdraw from Medicare+Choice, adding that plans have increased premiums and reduced benefits to such a degree that the pluses for beneficiaries don’t outweigh all of the constraints of managed care. Almost all Medicare+Choice plans are HMOs, and France pointed out that the promise of HMOs to control costs and improve quality hasn’t been met in the commercial market, raising the question of whether HMOs are the "right approach" for Medicare. Reischauer said the real question is whether Medicare+Choice can offer a better product than fee-for-service Medicare and Medigap supplemental coverage. If Medigap premiums rise 10 percent a year for a few years, there will be a "window of opportunity" for health plans to put together an attractive product, he said. GAO’s Scanlon agreed that the outlook for Medicare+Choice plans could change if consumers’ expectations change. When Medicare+Choice was thriving, it was an unsustainable situation because plans were giving away "$120 per month in free benefits to consumers," he said. But if consumers understand they don’t have catastrophic coverage and a drug benefit in fee-for-service Medicare and that they are paying a lot for first-dollar coverage if they buy a Medigap policy, a Medicare+Choice plan with a reasonable premium might be a better deal for consumers. "I don’t think we’re there yet in terms of consumers’ expectations, and whether we’ll get there and whether the plans will be willing to play is unclear," Scanlon said. According to the Analysts
This Issue Brief is based on a roundtable discussion, HSC’s Seventh Annual Wall Street Comes to Washington: Market Watchers and Policy Analysts Evaluate the Health Care System, held June 11, 2002, in Washington, D.C. MODERATOR
ISSUE BRIEFS are published by the Center for Studying Health System Change. President: Paul B. Ginsburg For additional copies or to be added |
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