Kate Randall
The Obama administration has announced a major shift in the way
Medicare will pay hospitals and doctors. Health and Human Services (HHS)
Secretary Sylvia Burwell announced the initiative Monday following a
closed-door meeting with representatives of the insurance industry,
large employers and doctors’ professional organizations.
The shift moves the health care counterrevolution embodied in the
2010 Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) into high gear. Over the next three
years, payments to hospitals and doctors for a large percentage of
health care provided under Medicare, the government-run health insurance
program for the elderly, will be shifted from the traditional
“fee-for-service” model to alternative methods in which health care
providers are rewarded for cutting costs and rationing care.
The radical revamping of Medicare will slash costs borne by the
government, insurance firms and hospital chains by denying Medicare
patients what is presently considered to be normal access to medical
procedures, drugs and hospital care. The realignment of Medicare more
directly with the profit dictates of the market will become the model
for the American health care system as a whole.
Burwell told the media following the meeting, “Today’s announcement
is about improving the quality of care we receive when we are sick,
while at the same time spending our health care dollars more wisely.”
The official line about improving the quality of health care, repeated
by Burwell, is a cynical lie.
Medicare provides health insurance for 50 million elderly and
disabled Americans at an estimated government cost of $600 billion a
year. It is the largest single buyer of health care services in the US.
It has for decades been a prime target of corporate interests and
politicians seeking to roll back the social reforms of the 1930s and
1960s, who have always encountered massive popular opposition.
The program, notwithstanding the limitations, distortions and
cutbacks inevitable within the framework of for-profit medicine, has
played a major role in reducing the poverty rate of retirees in the US
and extending life expectancy. It has taken a Democratic president,
overseeing a conspiracy of the corporations and the state against the
people disguised as a “progressive reform,” to initiate in earnest the
drive to gut Medicare. The calculated aim is to throw millions of
retirees into poverty and slash medical costs by shortening their life
spans.
According to the time-table announced Monday, by next year Medicare
will make 30 percent of its direct payments to doctors, hospitals and
other providers in accordance with “alternative payment models.” Half of
Medicare’s direct payments to providers are to be made in line with
such models by 2018.
These new models build on experiments begun under the ACA,
particularly through the use of so-called “accountable care
organizations,” or ACOs. Providers will be given a lump-sum payment for
treating a patient throughout a specific episode of care, such as knee
replacement surgery, instead of being reimbursed for the individual
medical components of that care.
HHS has also set a goal of tying 85 percent of all payments under
traditional Medicare to measures of “quality” or “value” by the end of
2016, when Obama leaves office, rising to 90 percent by the end of 2018.
How will this operate in practice? Hospitals with high rates of
patients readmitted within a month of being sent home will face
financial penalties, while those spending less on supposedly unnecessary
treatments and tests will be rewarded.
HHS is creating an agency with the Orwellian title “Health Care
Payment Learning and Action Network” to enforce these changes. This
panel presumably will be tasked with targeting “frivolous” procedures
and screenings for elimination in the interest of restoring “value” to
the health care system.
HHS Secretary Burwell is ideally suited for leading this attack on
Medicare. She is a veteran of the Clinton administration and the
Treasury Department. She served as an aid to Microsoft founder Bill
Gates, as president of the Walmart Foundation, and as a member of the
Metlife insurance company board.
Serving under Obama as budget director from 2013 to 2014, when social
spending was slashed by tens of billions, she was tapped by the
president to succeed HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius last June following
the disastrous roll-out of Obamacare’s HealthCare.gov web site. Obama
praised her at the time as a “proven manager,” who, as budget director,
had overseen a more than $400 billion decline in the federal deficit.
She was confirmed as HHS secretary with overwhelming bipartisan support.
Under Obamacare’s individual mandate, individuals and families
without insurance through their employers or a government program such
as Medicare or Medicaid are required to purchase coverage from private
insurers on the ACA’s health care exchanges or face a tax penalty.
The Obamacare ACOs are modeled on those already in existence in the
private sector. These are growing in popularity among large employers.
Justine Handelman, vice president for legislative and regulatory policy
at Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, which represents insurance
companies, told Bloomberg, “Medicare is aligning with what is already
working in the private sector to move away from fee-for-service. The
private sector is further ahead than Medicare right now.”
Burwell has stated that phasing out fee-for-service payments will be a
major priority of her tenure as HHS secretary. In addition to expanding
ACO’s to Medicare, administration officials said Monday they plan to
increase coordination of similar programs with state governments that
insure millions of their poorest residents through the Medicaid program.
Seated next to Burwell at Monday’s meeting was Karen Ignagni, chief
executive officer of America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the
industry’s main lobby group. “Health plans have been in the forefront of
implementing payment reforms in Medicare Advantage, Medicaid Managed
Care, and in the commercial marketplace,” Ignagni said in a statement.
“We are excited to bring these experiences and innovations to this new
collaboration.”
This glowing tribute from the CEO of AHIP is further confirmation of
the thoroughly right-wing character of Obamacare, which has nothing in
common with a true reform of the health care system in the interest of
providing universal, quality care. From its inception some five years
ago, Obamacare has been aimed at enriching the insurance industry and
health industry at the expense of vitally needed health care services
for the vast majority of Americans.
It has been designed from top to bottom in the closest consultation
with corporate lobbyists and lawyers, with no input from working people.
The sacrifices now being demanded of Medicare recipients in the
interest of “quality” and “value” will translate into the withholding of
medical treatments and procedures that will undoubtedly result in
suffering and untimely deaths for American seniors.
The gutting of Medicare is one prong of an assault on health care
that affects the entire working class and considerable sections of the
middle class. A second major area of attack under Obamacare is the
dismantling of employer-provided health care for active workers and
retirees, the system that for nearly 70 years secured health coverage
for most US workers.
Obamacare is designed to encourage employers to ditch their health
insurance programs and force their workers onto the ACA’s health care
exchanges. There, workers are forced, as individuals, to deal with
gigantic insurance companies that offer high-priced plans providing
sub-standard benefits.
The rich and the super-rich will, of course, continue to receive the best care money can buy.
Opponents of the predominantly fee-for-service system in Medicare
bemoan the fact that the $2.9 trillion-a-year US health care system does
not result in a healthier population than in those countries that spend
far less per capita. It goes unmentioned that the obscene
profit-gouging of private insurers, drug companies and hospital groups
are responsible for this state of affairs.
The only solution to the health care crisis lies in taking the profit
out of medicine, putting an end to privately owned health care
corporations, and guaranteeing free, high-quality health care for all
through the establishment of a democratically run, publicly owned
socialized health care system.
No comments:
Post a Comment