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		<title>Who&#8217;s Paying For Health Care</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jun 2015 02:47:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>&#013; America spent 17.3% of its gross domestic product on health care &#013; in 2009 (1). If you break that down on an individual level, we spend &#013; $7,129 per person each year on health care&#8230;more than any other country&#013; in the world (2). With 17 cents of every dollar Americans spent keeping&#013; our country [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es/whos-paying-for-health-care/">Who&#8217;s Paying For Health Care</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es">New Health and Fitness</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#013;</p>
<p>America spent 17.3% of its gross domestic product on health care &#013;<br />
in 2009 (1). If you break that down on an individual level, we spend &#013;<br />
$7,129 per person each year on health care&#8230;more than any other country&#013;<br />
 in the world (2). With 17 cents of every dollar Americans spent keeping&#013;<br />
 our country healthy, it&#8217;s no wonder the government is determined to &#013;<br />
reform the system. Despite the overwhelming attention health care is &#013;<br />
getting in the media, we know very little about where that money comes &#013;<br />
from or how it makes its way into the system (and rightfully so&#8230;the &#013;<br />
way we pay for health care is insanely complex, to say the least). This &#013;<br />
convoluted system is the unfortunate result of a series of programs that&#013;<br />
 attempt to control spending layered on top of one another. What follows&#013;<br />
 is a systematic attempt to peel away those layers, helping you become &#013;<br />
an informed health care consumer and an incontrovertible debater when &#013;<br />
discussing &#8220;Health Care Reform.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Who&#8217;s paying the bill?</strong></p>
<p>The&#013;<br />
 &#8220;bill payers&#8221; fall into three distinct buckets: individuals paying &#013;<br />
out-of-pocket, private insurance companies, and the government. We can &#013;<br />
look at these payors in two different ways: 1) How much do they pay and &#013;<br />
2) How many people do they pay for?</p>
<p>The majority of individuals in&#013;<br />
 America are insured by private insurance companies via their employers,&#013;<br />
 followed second by the government. These two sources of payment &#013;<br />
combined account for close to 80% of the funding for health care. The &#013;<br />
&#8220;Out-of-Pocket&#8221; payers fall into the uninsured as they have chosen to &#013;<br />
carry the risk of medical expense independently. When we look at the &#013;<br />
amount of money each of these groups spends on health care annually, the&#013;<br />
 pie shifts dramatically.</p>
<p>The government currently pays for 46% of&#013;<br />
 national health care expenditures. How is that possible? This will make&#013;<br />
 much more sense when we examine each of the payors individually.</p>
<p><strong>Understanding the Payors </strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Out-of-Pocket</em></strong></p>
<p>A&#013;<br />
 select portion of the population chooses to carry the risk of medical &#013;<br />
expenses themselves rather than buying into an insurance plan. This &#013;<br />
group tends to be younger and healthier than insured patients and, as &#013;<br />
such, accesses medical care much less frequently. Because this group has&#013;<br />
 to pay for all incurred costs, they also tend to be much more &#013;<br />
discriminating in how they access the system. The result is that &#013;<br />
patients (now more appropriately termed &#8220;consumers&#8221;) comparison shop for&#013;<br />
 tests and elective procedures and wait longer before seeking medical &#013;<br />
attention. The payment method for this group is simple: the doctors and &#013;<br />
hospitals charge set fees for their services and the patient pays that &#013;<br />
amount directly to the doctor/hospital.</p>
<p><strong><em>Private Insurance</em></strong></p>
<p>This&#013;<br />
 is where the whole system gets a lot more complicated. Private &#013;<br />
insurance is purchased either individually or is provided by employers &#013;<br />
(most people get it through their employer as we mentioned). When it &#013;<br />
comes to private insurance, there are two main types: Fee-for-Service &#013;<br />
insurers and Managed Care insurers. These two groups approach paying for&#013;<br />
 care very differently.</p>
<p><em>Fee-for-Service: </em></p>
<p>This &#013;<br />
group makes it relatively simple (believe it or not). The employer or &#013;<br />
individual buys a health plan from a private insurance company with a &#013;<br />
defined set of benefits. This benefit package will also have what is &#013;<br />
called a <strong><em>deductible</em></strong> (an amount the &#013;<br />
patient/individual must pay for their health care services before their &#013;<br />
insurance pays anything). Once the deductible amount is met, the health &#013;<br />
plan pays the fees for services provided throughout the health care &#013;<br />
system. Often, they will pay a maximum fee for a service (say $100 for &#013;<br />
an x-ray). The plan will require the individual to pay a <strong><em>copayment</em></strong>&#013;<br />
 (a sharing of the cost between the health plan and the individual). A &#013;<br />
typical industry standard is an 80/20 split of the payment, so in the &#013;<br />
case of the $100 x-ray, the health plan would pay $80 and the patient &#013;<br />
would pay $20&#8230;remember those annoying medical bills stating your &#013;<br />
insurance did not cover all the charges? This is where they come from. &#013;<br />
Another downside of this model is that health care providers are both &#013;<br />
financially incentivized and legally bound to perform more tests and &#013;<br />
procedures as they are paid additional fees for each of these or are &#013;<br />
held legally accountable for not ordering the tests when things go wrong&#013;<br />
 (called &#8220;CYA or &#8220;Cover You&#8217;re A**&#8221; medicine). If ordering more tests &#013;<br />
provided you with more legal protection and more compensation, wouldn&#8217;t &#013;<br />
you order anything justifiable? Can we say misalignment of incentives?</p>
<p><em>Managed Care:</em></p>
<p>Now&#013;<br />
 it gets crazy. Managed care insurers pay for care while also &#8220;managing&#8221;&#013;<br />
 the care they pay for (very clever name, right). Managed care is &#013;<br />
defined as &#8220;a set of techniques used by or on behalf of purchasers of &#013;<br />
health care benefits to manage health care costs by influencing patient &#013;<br />
care decision making through case-by-case assessments of the &#013;<br />
appropriateness of care prior to its provision&#8221; (2). Yep, insurers make &#013;<br />
medical decisions on your behalf (sound as scary to you as it does to &#013;<br />
us?). The original idea was driven by a desire by employers, insurance &#013;<br />
companies, and the public to control soaring health care costs. Doesn&#8217;t &#013;<br />
seem to be working quite yet. Managed care groups either provide medical&#013;<br />
 care directly or contract with a select group of health care providers.&#013;<br />
 These insurers are further subdivided based on their own personal &#013;<br />
management styles. You may be familiar with many of these sub-types as &#013;<br />
you&#8217;ve had to choose between then when selecting your insurance.</p>
<p />
<ul>
<li><em><strong>Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) / Exclusive Provider Organization (EPO)</strong></em>:This&#013;<br />
 is the closet managed care gets to the Fee-for-Service model with many &#013;<br />
of the same characteristics as a Fee-for-Service plan like deductibles &#013;<br />
and copayments. PPO&#8217;s &amp; EPO&#8217;s contract with a set list of providers &#013;<br />
(we&#8217;re all familiar with these lists) with whom they have negotiated set&#013;<br />
 (read discounted) fees for care. Yes, individual doctors have to charge&#013;<br />
 less for their services if they want to see patients with these &#013;<br />
insurance plans. An EPO has a smaller and more strictly regulated list &#013;<br />
of physicians than a PPO but are otherwise the same. PPO&#8217;s control costs&#013;<br />
 by requiring preauthorization for many services and second opinions for&#013;<br />
 major procedures. All of this aside, many consumers feel that they have&#013;<br />
 the greatest amount of autonomy and flexibility with PPO&#8217;s.&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
<strong><em>Health Management Organization (HMO)</em></strong>: HMO&#8217;s &#013;<br />
combine insurance with health care delivery. This model will not have &#013;<br />
deductibles but will have copayments. In an HMO, the organization hires &#013;<br />
doctors to provide care and either builds its own hospital or contracts &#013;<br />
for the services of a hospital within the community. In this model the &#013;<br />
doctor works for the insurance provider directly (aka a Staff Model &#013;<br />
HMO). Kaiser Permanente is an example of a very large HMO that we&#8217;ve &#013;<br />
heard mentioned frequently during the recent debates. Since the company &#013;<br />
paying the bill is also providing the care, HMO&#8217;s heavily emphasize &#013;<br />
preventive medicine and primary care (enter the Kaiser &#8220;Thrive&#8221; &#013;<br />
campaign). The healthier you are, the more money the HMO saves. The &#013;<br />
HMO&#8217;s emphasis on keeping patients healthy is commendable as this is the&#013;<br />
 only model to do so, however, with complex, lifelong, or advanced &#013;<br />
diseases, they are incentivized to provide the minimum amount of care &#013;<br />
necessary to reduce costs. It is with these conditions that we hear the &#013;<br />
horror stories of insufficient care. This being said, physicians in HMO &#013;<br />
settings continue to practice medicine as they feel is needed to best &#013;<br />
care for their patients despite the incentives to reduce costs inherent &#013;<br />
in the system (recall that physicians are often salaried in HMO&#8217;s and &#013;<br />
have no incentive to order more or less tests).</li>
</ul>
<p />
<p><strong><em>The Government</em></strong></p>
<p>The&#013;<br />
 U.S. Government pays for health care in a variety of ways depending on &#013;<br />
whom they are paying for. The government, through a number of different &#013;<br />
programs, provides insurance to individuals over 65 years of age, people&#013;<br />
 of any age with permanent kidney failure, certain disabled people under&#013;<br />
 65, the military, military veterans, federal employees, children of &#013;<br />
low-income families, and, most interestingly, prisoners. It also has the&#013;<br />
 same characteristics as a Fee-for-Service plan, with deductibles and &#013;<br />
copayments. As you would imagine, the majority of these populations are &#013;<br />
very expensive to cover medically. While the government only insures 28%&#013;<br />
 of the American population, they are paying for 46% of all care &#013;<br />
provided. The populations covered by the government are amongst the &#013;<br />
sickest and most medically needy in America resulting in this &#013;<br />
discrepancy between number of individuals insured and cost of care.</p>
<p>The largest and most well-known government programs are Medicare and Medicaid. Let&#8217;s take a look at these individually:</p>
<p><em>Medicare</em>:</p>
<p>The&#013;<br />
 Medicare program currently covers 42.5 million Americans. To qualify &#013;<br />
for Medicare you must meet one of the following criteria:</p>
<p />
<ul>
<li>Over 65 years of age&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
Permanent kidney failure&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
Meet certain disability requirements</li>
</ul>
<p />
<div class="mobile-ad-container"><!-- 0-Test Responsive --><ins class="adsbygoogle" />&#013;
</div>
<p>So you meet the criteria&#8230;what do you get? Medicare &#013;<br />
comes in 4 parts (Part A-D), some of which are free and some of which &#013;<br />
you have to pay for. You&#8217;ve probably heard of the various parts over the&#013;<br />
 years thanks to CNN (remember the commotion about the Part D drug &#013;<br />
benefits during the Bush administration?) but we&#8217;ll give you a quick &#013;<br />
refresher just in case.</p>
<p />
<ul>
<li>Part A (Hospital Insurance): &#013;<br />
This part of Medicare is free and covers any inpatient and outpatient &#013;<br />
hospital care the patient may need (only for a set number of days, &#013;<br />
however, with the added bonus of copayments and deductibles&#8230;apparently&#013;<br />
 there really is no such thing as a free lunch).&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
Part B (Medical Insurance): This part, which you must purchase, covers &#013;<br />
physicians&#8217; services, and selected other health care services and &#013;<br />
supplies that are not covered by Part A. What does it cost? The Part B &#013;<br />
premium for 2009 ranged from $96.40 to $308.30 per month depending on &#013;<br />
your household income.&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
Part C (Managed Care): This part, called Medicare Advantage, is a &#013;<br />
private insurance plan that provides all of the coverage provided in &#013;<br />
Parts A and B and must cover medically necessary services. Part C &#013;<br />
replaces Parts A &amp; B. All private insurers that want to provide Part&#013;<br />
 C coverage must meet certain criteria set forth by the government. Your&#013;<br />
 care will also be managed much like the HMO plans previously discussed.&#013;<br />
&#013;
</li>
<p>&#013;</p>
<li>&#013;<br />
Part D (Prescription Drug Plans): Part D covers prescription drugs and costs $20 to $40 per month for those who chose to enroll.</li>
</ul>
<p />
<p>Ok,&#013;<br />
 now how does Medicare pay for everything? Hospitals are paid &#013;<br />
predetermined amounts of money per admission or per outpatient procedure&#013;<br />
 for services provided to Medicare patients. These predetermined amounts&#013;<br />
 are based upon over 470 diagnosis-related groups (DRGs) or Ambulatory &#013;<br />
Payment Classifications (APC&#8217;s) rather than the actual cost of the care &#013;<br />
rendered (interesting way to peg hospital reimbursement&#8230;especially &#013;<br />
when the Harvard economist who developed the DRG system openly disagrees&#013;<br />
 with its use for this purpose). The cherry on top of the irrational &#013;<br />
reimbursement system is that the amount of money assigned to each DRG is&#013;<br />
 not the same for each hospital. Totally logical (can you sense our &#013;<br />
sarcasm?). The figure is based on a formula that takes into account the &#013;<br />
type of service, the type of hospital, and the location of the hospital.&#013;<br />
 This may sound logical but often times this system fails.</p>
<p><em>Medicaid</em>:</p>
<p>Medicaid&#013;<br />
 is a jointly funded (funded by both federal and state governments) &#013;<br />
health insurance program for low-income families. Eligibility rules vary&#013;<br />
 from state to state and factors in age, pregnancy, disability, income &#013;<br />
and resources. Poverty alone does not qualify an individual for Medicaid&#013;<br />
 (there is currently no government-provided insurance for the American &#013;<br />
poor&#8230;despite the fact that almost all first world countries have such a&#013;<br />
 system&#8230;enter the current health care debate) but is a significant &#013;<br />
factor in Medicaid eligibility. Each state operates its own Medicaid &#013;<br />
program but must adhere to certain federal guidelines to receive &#013;<br />
matching federal funds (you may be familiar with California&#8217;s MediCal, &#013;<br />
Massachusetts&#8217; MassHealth and Oregon&#8217;s Oregon Health Plan due to their &#013;<br />
recent media coverage). Medicaid payments currently assist nearly 60 &#013;<br />
percent of all nursing home residents and about 37 percent of all &#013;<br />
childbirths in the United States.</p>
<p><strong>How are the bills paid?</strong></p>
<p>We&#013;<br />
 now understand who is paying the bill but we have yet to cover how &#013;<br />
those bills are paid. There are two broad divisions of arrangements for &#013;<br />
paying for and delivering health care: fee-for-service care and prepaid &#013;<br />
care.</p>
<p><strong><em>Fee-for-Service </em></strong></p>
<p>As we &#013;<br />
mentioned briefly while discussing PPO&#8217;s, in a fee-for-service &#013;<br />
structure, consumers select a provider, receive care (a.k.a. &#8220;service&#8221;) &#013;<br />
from the provider, and incur expenses (a.k.a. &#8220;a fee&#8221;) for the care. &#013;<br />
Deductibles and copayments are also required as previously discussed. &#013;<br />
Pretty simple. The physician is then reimbursed for their services in &#013;<br />
part by the insurer (i.e. a private insurance company or the government)&#013;<br />
 and in part by the patient, who is responsible for the balance unpaid &#013;<br />
by the insurer (the return of the unanticipated medical bill despite &#013;<br />
your overpriced insurance). Again, the major downfall of the &#013;<br />
fee-for-service approach is that medical professionals are incentivized &#013;<br />
to provide services (and by this we mean any and all services they can &#013;<br />
legally request or must request to be protected legally), some of which &#013;<br />
may be nonessential, to increase their revenue and/or &#8220;C.Y.A.&#8221; (revenue &#013;<br />
that has steadily decreased as insurance companies continue to lower the&#013;<br />
 amount they pay medical professionals for their services).</p>
<p><strong><em>Fee Schedule</em></strong></p>
<p>A&#013;<br />
 fee schedule operates in the same way that Fee-for-Service does with &#013;<br />
one exception: instead of using the &#8220;usual, customary, and reasonable&#8221; &#013;<br />
amount to reimburse medical professionals, states set fees to be paid &#013;<br />
for specific procedures and services. The reimbursement is very low &#013;<br />
($.10-.15 on the dollar) and barely covers the actual direct cost of &#013;<br />
providing the care. Physicians may chose to opt into the plan or not &#013;<br />
(starting to see why a doctor might not be so excited about this plan?).&#013;<br />
 Would you sign up to be paid 10 cents for every dollar you charged for &#013;<br />
your work? Try the insurance reimbursement approach next time you go out&#013;<br />
 to eat. We&#8217;ll come bail you out of the Big House if things go awry. &#013;<br />
What happens when the insurance system does this? You get the Wal-Mart &#013;<br />
approach to medicine (high volume, low quality). Not the kind of heath &#013;<br />
care we recommend.</p>
<p><strong><em>Pre-Paid</em></strong></p>
<p>Pre-paid&#013;<br />
 health care? Like a phone card? Not exactly&#8211;but close. The pre-paid &#013;<br />
system evolved out of the insurance company&#8217;s desire to share its risk (&#013;<br />
 a.k.a &#8220;pooled risk&#8221;) with health care providers. Essentially, they &#013;<br />
wanted the doctors to have some skin in the game. In the pre-paid &#013;<br />
system, insurers make arrangements with health care providers to provide&#013;<br />
 agreed-upon covered health care services to a given population of &#013;<br />
consumers for a (usually discounted) set price-the per-person premium &#013;<br />
fee-over a particular time period. What does that mean? It means that &#013;<br />
Dr. Bob gets paid, say, $30 per month to take care of Joe the Plumber &#013;<br />
including his blood work and x-rays. If Dr. Bob spends less than that &#013;<br />
caring for Joe, he makes money. If Joe is sick every month and needs &#013;<br />
lots of tests and follow-up visits, Dr. Bob could lose money caring for &#013;<br />
Joe. The set monthly fee paid to the doctor for taking care of a patient&#013;<br />
 is set up on a per-member, per-month (PMPM) rate called a &#8220;<em>capitated fee.&#8221;</em>&#013;<br />
 The provider receives the capitated fee per enrollee regardless of &#013;<br />
whether the enrollee uses health care services and regardless of the &#013;<br />
quality of services provided (not a good thing in our book). &#013;<br />
Theoretically, providers should become more prudent and subsequently &#013;<br />
provide services in a more cost effective manner because they are &#013;<br />
bearing some of the risk. Often times, however, less care is provided &#013;<br />
than is needed in hopes of saving money and increasing profits. In &#013;<br />
addition, physicians are incentivized to cherry pick the youngest and &#013;<br />
healthiest patients because these patients typically require less care &#013;<br />
(i.e. they are cheaper to keep healthy). We like that doctors are &#013;<br />
encouraged to keep patients healthy but we have to worry about the ways &#013;<br />
in which they are being encouraged to reduce costs (as little care as &#013;<br />
possible?). Again, the incentive system falls short and encourages &#013;<br />
providers to act unethically.</p>
<p><strong>The Take Home Message:</strong></p>
<p>Health&#013;<br />
 Care in the United States today is complex and messy at best. The &#013;<br />
layers on top of layers of failed attempts to correct the system &#013;<br />
continue to encourage the wrong behavior in both patients (out of fear &#013;<br />
of medical bills) and providers (out of fear of bankruptcy). We have yet&#013;<br />
 to provide every American citizen with medical care (something that &#013;<br />
goes without saying in most 1st World countries&#8230;even Cuba has it!). We&#013;<br />
 spend more money on caring for our citizens than any country in the &#013;<br />
world yet we continue to lag behind in terms of national health &#013;<br />
outcomes. We think it&#8217;s safe to say that we&#8217;re not getting the best bang&#013;<br />
 for our buck. The ultimate solution? We wish we knew. Only time will &#013;<br />
tell where the system goes from here. Our goal: to help you better &#013;<br />
understand the system as it stands today in hopes of developing a more &#013;<br />
effective, efficient, and comprehensive system for the future. Are you &#013;<br />
with us?</p>
<p>References</p>
<p>1. Levey N. Soaring cost of healthcare sets a record. Los Angeles Times. Feb 4 2010.</p>
<p>2. McKenzie J, Pinger R, Kotecki J. An Introduction to Community Health, 6th Ed. Jones and Bartlett Publishers. 2008.</p>
<p>3. Bodenheimer TS, Grumbach K. Understanding Health Policy. 5th Ed. Lange Medical Books/McGraw-Hill. 2002.</p>
<p>4.&#013;<br />
 Kaiser Family Foundation. &#8220;EXPLAINING HEALTH CARE REFORM: How Do Health&#013;<br />
 Care Costs Vary By Region?&#8221; Brief #8030. December 2009.</p>
<div class='shareaholic-canvas' data-app-id='12564813' data-app-id-name='category_below_content' data-app='share_buttons' data-title='Who&#039;s Paying For Health Care' data-link='http://cft.hol.es/whos-paying-for-health-care/' data-summary=''></div><div class="mads-block"></div><p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es/whos-paying-for-health-care/">Who&#8217;s Paying For Health Care</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="http://cft.hol.es">New Health and Fitness</a>.</p>
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