Health Reform: Costs, Variations in Care & Public Insurance

Wall Street Journal

A brief commentary from the WSJ on-line regarding some of the issues evolving around healthcare reform.  One thing is for sure, healthcare costs vary to the extreme from one end of the country to other and lack any apparent uniformity.  Something to take note of the next time you receive a medical statement and/or bill and are alarmed by the actual charge.

The health-reform theme of the day seems to be widespread variations in health-care costs in different areas around the country. If one city spends twice as much as another on health care without any noticeable benefit for patients, the thinking goes, there must be a way to find some savings.


This is an old idea among health wonks (see the Health Blog’s 2007 interview with Dartmouth’s Jack Wennberg, who has been talking about this for decades), but it has gained currency lately amid the big health-reform push in Washington.
Congress may wind up capping Medicare payments in areas where costs are unusually high, or sparing low-spending regions from cuts in Medicare reimbursement, the New York Times notes in a story today.


In 2006, this morning’s Washington Post notes, Medicare spent $5,812 on the average beneficiary in La Crosse, Wisc., compared with $16,351 in Miami, without clear evidence that the extra spending resulted in better care.


Meanwhile, the WSJ reports today, we could start seeing the first proposed health-reform bill as soon as this week from a Senate committee, the start of a stream of health-reform legislation likely to flow from different committees in both houses in the coming months. Congress is aiming to pass legislation by August and deliver a single bill to President Obama by October.


Two key debates remain central, the WSJ notes. One is whether to include a national, government-backed insurance plan; a group of Republicans from the powerful Senate Finance Committee sent a letter to Obama on Monday reiterating their opposition to a public plan, which the administration backs. The other debate is, of course, how to pay for health reform. One possibility to keep an eye on: taxing some health-benefit plans, an option we discussed in this post.

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Medical bills prompt more than 60 perecent of U.S. bankruptcies

 

Another interesting article about the increase in bankruptcies as a result of medical bills.

HEALTH

By Theresa Tamkins

This year, an estimated 1.5 million Americans will declare bankruptcy. Many people may chalk up that misfortune to overspending or a lavish lifestyle, but a new study suggests that more than 60 percent of people who go bankrupt are actually capsized by medical bills.

Expert: “Medical bills … are an issue that can very easily and in pretty short order overwhelm a lot families.”

Bankruptcies due to medical bills increased by nearly 50 percent in a six-year period, from 46 percent in 2001 to 62 percent in 2007, and most of those who filed for bankruptcy were middle-class, well-educated homeowners, according to a report that will be published in the August issue of The American Journal of Medicine.

“Unless you’re a Warren Buffett or Bill Gates, you’re one illness away from financial ruin in this country,” says lead author Steffie Woolhandler, M.D., of the Harvard Medical School, in Cambridge, Mass. “If an illness is long enough and expensive enough, private insurance offers very little protection against medical bankruptcy, and that’s the major finding in our study.”

Woolhandler and her colleagues surveyed a random sample of 2,314 people who filed for bankruptcy in early 2007, looked at their court records, and then interviewed more than 1,000 of them.

They concluded that 62.1 percent of the bankruptcies were medically related because the individuals either had more than $5,000 (or 10 percent of their pretax income) in medical bills, mortgaged their home to pay for medical bills, or lost significant income due to an illness. On average, medically bankrupt families had $17,943 in out-of-pocket expenses, including $26,971 for those who lacked insurance and $17,749 who had insurance at some point.

Overall, three-quarters of the people with a medically-related bankruptcy had health insurance, they say.

“That was actually the predominant problem in patients in our study — 78 percent of them had health insurance, but many of them were bankrupted anyway because there were gaps in their coverage like co-payments and deductibles and uncovered services,” says Woolhandler. “Other people had private insurance but got so sick that they lost their job and lost their insurance.”

However, Peter Cunningham, Ph.D., a senior fellow at the Center for Studying Health System Change, a nonpartisan policy research organization in Washington, D.C., isn’t completely convinced. He says it’s often hard to tell in which cases medical bills add to the bleak financial picture without being directly responsible for the bankruptcies.

“I’m not sure that it is correct to say that medical problems were the direct cause of all of these bankruptcies,” he says. “In most of these cases, it’s going to be medical expenses and other things, other debt that is accumulating.”

Either way, he agrees that medical bills are an increasing problem for many people.

“I think medical bills are something that a lot of families are having a lot of difficulty with and whether it’s the direct cause of bankruptcy or whether it helps to push them over the edge because they already were in a precarious financial situation, it’s a big concern and hopefully that’s what medical reform will try to address,” he says.

The study may overestimate the number of bankruptcies caused by medical bills yet underestimate the financial burden of health care on American families, because most people struggle along but don’t end up declaring bankruptcy, according to Cunningham.

“Bankruptcy is the most extreme or final step for people who are having problems paying medical bills,” he says. “Medical bills and medical costs are an issue that can very easily and in pretty short order overwhelm a lot families who are on otherwise solid financial ground, including those with private insurance.”

His group’s research found that medical bills unduly stress 1 in 5 families.

Either way, the high cost of health care is a problem that’s probably getting worse for people in the United States, particularly since the economic picture became grimmer after the study was conducted.

“The recession didn’t happen until a year after our study,” says Woolhandler. “We’re quite sure that the problem of bankruptcy overall is worse, the numbers have been soaring, and the number this year is expected to be higher than it was before Congress tightened bankruptcy eligibility in 2005.”

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