Health Bill Senate Vote

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July 1, 2009
The House Health Care Bill: A Blueprint for Federal Control
by Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D.
WebMemo #2515
The U.S. House of Representatives leadership recently unveiled a mammoth 852-page blueprint for overhauling Americans' health care: the draft "Tri-Committee Health Reform Bill." It is the product of three major House Committees with jurisdiction over health policy--Education and Labor, Energy and Commerce, and Ways and Means. If enacted, this comprehensive legislation would amount to federal control of the health care sector of the economy, with the implementation of far-reaching policies impacting doctors and patients in the public as well as the private sector.

Like the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee bill,[1] the House bill would create a new public plan to compete with private health insurance in a national health insurance exchange; impose mandates on individuals and businesses to buy health insurance coverage or be subject to tax penalties; and allow the federal government to control, standardize, and regulate health insurance, defining what is and is not "acceptable coverage" for American citizens.

The "Public" Plan

The bill would require the secretary of health and human services (HHS) to establish a "public health insurance option" to compete against private health plans on a "level playing field" in a national health insurance exchange. It would also expand eligibility for the existing Medicaid program up the income scale to 133 percent of the federal poverty level.

The public plan's payment to providers would be based on Medicare payment rates plus 5 percent. The Lewin Group estimates that, by using the Medicare payment rates and opening up the plan to all employees, as the bill would provide, the House bill could result in up to 113.5 million people losing private coverage.[2] Lewin estimates that cost shifting to private plans from the public plan would amount to an additional $460 per person for those remaining in private insurance,[3] while physician and hospital revenues, under such a scenario, would decline significantly.

Contrary to the House sponsors' claims, it is hard to imagine a "level playing field" where Congress creates a special government plan to compete against private health plans while also creating the rules for its competitors.

While the House bill would set up an account within the Treasury for the deposit of startup funds and premiums, the bill would also require taxpayers to retain the risks and depend on congressional restraint in the appropriation of additional taxpayer funds for the public plan. In light of recent congressional bailouts of automakers and financial institutions, belief in such restraint would amount to a triumph of imagination over experience.

A National Health Insurance Exchange

The bill would create a National Health Insurance Exchange in order to "facilitate access of individuals and employers, through a transparent process, to a variety of choices of affordable quality health insurance, including a public insurance option."

Champions of state-based health reform have proposed a health insurance exchange to serve as a state-based administrative body--not a regulatory body--to provide comparative information on prices, plans and benefits; facilitate enrollment of individuals and employees; collect and transmit premiums payments; and thus reduce the administrative costs for small businesses and the individuals and families employed by them.[4] It would facilitate a defined contribution on the part of employers for their employees, enabling them to choose their own plan while securing the existing tax advantages of group health insurance.

This would enable individuals to buy and own the health plan they determine is best for them and thus be able to take it with them from job to job. This added portability in health insurance would, in and of itself, result in a dramatic reduction in the number of the uninsured, most of whom lost coverage due to changes in their employment situation. For some states, a health insurance exchange may be an appropriate remedy for a dysfunctional health insurance market.

But in the House bill, the health insurance exchange, governed by a commissioner, would be a national institution and function as a powerful regulatory agency. Combined with federal benefit setting and a public plan, it would effectively limit personal choice and reduce competition, as the federal government would erode private coverage and limit the kind of plans that could enter and compete in the market. States could only set up a state-based exchange with federal permission.

Under the House bill, Congress would not forge a federal-state partnership; rather, it would enact federal domination of the states. It would also undermine, not advance, state innovation in the provision of new health insurance options.

Federal Benefit Setting

The House bill would require every American to have health insurance coverage that Congress would define as "acceptable coverage." Under the terms of the bill, existing coverage at the time of enactment would be "grandfathered," but health plans would be legally required to conform to federal standards over time. Eventually, health insurance in the individual market would no longer be considered "acceptable coverage."

Because Congress would centralize decision-making over health insurance in Washington, taxpayers can expect a replay of the frenzied special-interest lobbying that characterizes benefit mandate decisions in state legislatures and agencies.

In addition, government health benefit decisions often include coverage of controversial items such as abortion. A number of House Democrats are concerned that the House bill would become a vehicle for taxpayer subsidization of abortion coverage.[5]

Mandates on Individuals and Businesses

The bill contains both an individual and an employer mandate. Under the terms of the bill, an individual would be required to enroll in an "acceptable" health plan or face a tax penalty. The only exception would be "hardship" cases. For an individual, the tax would be equal to 2 percent of their income up to the "national average premium amount." Such a mandate would amount to an unprecedented restriction on personal liberty.

"Medium and large" employers would be required to offer an "acceptable" health plan, under the terms and conditions of the House bill, or pay an "assumed" 8 percent payroll tax.[6] As economists generally note, the costs of an employer mandate are invariably passed onto employees in the form of wage or compensation reduction or even job loss. There is yet to be an econometric analysis of the impact of these provisions of the House bill.

Promises, Promises

The President has said repeatedly that if Americans like their private health insurance coverage, they would be able to keep it. But in fact, the incentives built into the House bill--a combination of mandates and the provision of a public plan--would guarantee that millions of Americans would lose their private coverage, regardless of their personal preferences.

In the Senate, the leading bill would add $1 trillion to the deficit over 10 years, while pushing millions of Americans out of their employer-based coverage. While the President insists that health care reform should be "deficit neutral," the cost of the House bill--both quantifiable and not--is yet unknown.

Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D., is Director of the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
 
So, what advice can anyone give to someone who just started their own indy health agency 5 months ago? Should I just cut my losses and jump now? or go down with the ship hoping it stops sinking along the way? Any advice is greatly appreciated
 
This is what the Senates Option is shaping up as ...

TheHill.com - Senate Dems say health bill covers 97%


Senate Dems say health bill covers 97% By Jeffrey Young Posted: 07/02/09 12:53 PM [ET] Senate Democrats on Thursday unveiled their plans to create a government-run public health insurance option and require most employers to provide healthcare benefits to their workers, partially filling in the blanks on two of the biggest unsettled questions in the effort to reform the healthcare system.

According to Democrats on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, their legislation would extend health insurance coverage to 21 million uninsured people over 10 years at a net cost of $611.4 billion. Combined with separate legislation being developed by the Senate Finance Committee, senators said their healthcare reform plan would bring the total number of newly insured people to 41 million by 2019, or 97 percent of the projected U.S. population, excluding illegal immigrants.


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Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), who is overseeing the HELP Committee in the absence of ailing Chairman Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), said he anticipates the Finance Committee bill would extend coverage to 20 million people via an expansion of the Medicaid program.

Importantly, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) concluded that the number of people receiving health benefits at work would remain steady at about 160 million people over the 10-year time period, which could disarm the frequent Republican critique that Democrats' healthcare reform plans would destabilize insurance coverage for the middle class.

Under the new provisions, employers with more than 25 workers would be required to either provide "affordable" coverage or pay the government an annual fee of $750 for each full-time employee and $375 for part-timers. "It's a cost, I realize that, but a modest cost indeed," said Dodd. The business community in general, and groups representing small employers in particular, strongly oppose such requirements, though Wal-Mart this week endorsed the concept of the employer mandate.

The public option would not receive federal subsidies and would be funded through premiums. The Department of Health and Human Services would run the plan and set payment rates for medical services and products. Republicans, health insurers, many medical provider groups and big-business organizations oppose the public option, contending that a government program cannot compete fairly with private companies.

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) rejected that argument, noting that private student-loan providers coexist with government loans. He contended that health insurance companies need to be checked in the marketplace by a stable, not-for-profit option. "Ultimately, the public option will keep insurance companies more honest," Brown said. "We're convinced it will make both [public and private plans] better."

The coverage figures and cost estimates are considerably better than projected for an earlier draft of the bill because committee Democrats initially left out both the public option and the so-called "play or pay" mandate for employers. When the CBO analyzed the original draft, it estimated its price tag at more than $1 trillion over 10 years to extend coverage to 16 million people. Those unflattering numbers threatened to stall the momentum for the Democrats' healthcare reform plan last month.

President Obama praised the HELP Committee bill in a statement. "Today the Senate HELP Committee has produced legislation that lowers costs, protects choice of doctors and plans and assures quality and affordable health care for Americans," Obama said. "The HELP Committee legislation reflects many of the principles I’ve laid out," he said, such as the creation of a health insurance "exchange" through which people can shop for insurance, a ban on insurance companies excluding people with pre-existing conditions, and the public option.
The bill also includes a mandate that individuals obtain health coverage, a policy Obama opposed during his presidential campaign but has since indicated he would support, with possible exceptions for those who prove that having insurance would pose a financial hardship.

The Finance Committee has not announced its plans for an expansion of Medicaid, nor has the CBO scored its projected cost, but a senior HELP Committee Democratic aide said their calculations were based on an assumption that all legal U.S. residents with incomes below 150 percent of the poverty level would be eligible for Medicaid under the combined HELP-Finance legislation.

The CBO score of the HELP Committee bill does not tell the full story about how much healthcare reform will cost. The bulk of the cost-cutting and revenue-raising provisions of healthcare reform will come from the Finance Committee, which has sole authority over reducing Medicare and Medicaid spending and on raising taxes. The Finance Committee has not yet released its bill or any cost estimates.

The HELP Committee spent two weeks marking up its draft legislation before Congress broke for its July 4th recess despite the bill lacking two of the most important — and contentious — elements of healthcare reform. Even without these issues on the table, the committee's public meetings were marked by partisan rancor, despite votes to include 87 amendments offered by Republicans.

Obama and Democratic leaders in the House and Senate want healthcare reform bills passed in both chambers by the end of July, a timeline that will prove especially difficult in the Senate.

The HELP Committee must return to its markup to debate the most controversial elements of reform. The Finance Committee left for the recess without introducing a bill and the panel's expected bipartisan product will more than likely include no public option. The two committees must then consolidate their bills and the Senate must schedule floor debate. Floor time could prove precious with the Senate poised to begin considering the confirmation of Obama's nominee for Supreme Court justice, Sonia Sotomayor.


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"That's going to require a lot of work and I believe it can be done," Dodd said. "One step at a time. This is a long process." Dodd acknowledged, however, that Republican support will be hard to come by. "We may not achieve the level of bipartisanship I'd like at the first stage," he said.

The key difference in cost of the two drafts of the HELP Committee bill is the employer mandate, which keeps companies in the business of providing health insurance —and keeps the cost of that coverage off the federal government's books. Dodd said Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.), who sits on both the HELP and Finance committees, developed the "play or pay" provisions.

Under the CBO estimate of the earlier draft bill, roughly 15 million people were projected to move out of the employer-sponsored insurance market into other coverage. In addition, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) said, the committee lowered the price tag by reducing the upper limit for eligibility for insurance subsidies from 500 percent of the poverty level to 400 percent.

Most of the expansion of insurance coverage would come via policies purchased on a national exchange, or gateway that would open in 2012. People who are not offered coverage through work — or whose benefits cost more than 12.5 percent of their salary — would be able to choose among accredited plans, including the public option, and people with incomes below 400 percent of the poverty level would have access to federal subsidies. According to the CBO, 27 million people would get private or public insurance through this mechanism.
 
There is hope of defunding the bill, but the only real chance is to rule this bill unconstitutional.

Otherwise we will see step by step moving toward total Government Plan no options and then rationed care.

MDs are already fleeing their practice.
 
Let me get this straight. We're going to be "gifted" with a health care plan we are forced to purchase and fined if we don't, written by a committee whose chairman says he doesn't understand it, passed by a Congress that hasn't read it but exempts themselves from it, to be signed by a president who also smokes, with funding administered by a treasury chief who didn't pay his taxes, to be overseen by a surgeon general who is obese, and financed by a country that's broke. Now, honestly just ask yourself, what could possibly go wrong?
 
Let me get this straight. We're going to be "gifted" with a health care plan we are forced to purchase and fined if we don't, written by a committee whose chairman says he doesn't understand it, passed by a Congress that hasn't read it but exempts themselves from it, to be signed by a president who also smokes, with funding administered by a treasury chief who didn't pay his taxes, to be overseen by a surgeon general who is obese, and financed by a country that's broke. Now, honestly just ask yourself, what could possibly go wrong?
Funny but sad, too. Many will just pay the fine rather than pay the bill. Some will wait until they have a need for coverage and then buy - no one is denied so they can do it. Kind of like buying insurance at the scene of the car accident. What's the latest consensus on this? I've heard comissions could drastically change the way most insurance agents sell policies especially if clients only stay on a policy for 1-2 years because of rate increases then want to change. Is it true that some insurance companies are stating that they are going to an "as earned" type of pay structure with lower comissions like automobile insurance then "beef up" the comissions on ancillary products such as life insurance, accident riders, dental, vision, and disability to make up for the drop in income for agents?
Do you all see health insurance going the way of Canada and England where health insurance is not sold???
 
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