Massachusetts Lawmakers Unveil Ambitious Plan To Cut Health Care Costs
By Rachel Zimmerman and Carey Goldberg,
WBUR's CommonHealth blog
May 04, 2012
When Massachusetts passed sweeping health insurance reform in 2006, a crucial
piece was missing from the landmark legislation: how to control rising medical
costs.
Today, state lawmakers announced a new proposal to do just that,
including new ways to pay doctors and hospitals, a specific cap on health-care
spending tethered to economic growth and a tax on the statefs most expensive
hospitals if they canft justify their prices.
MIT economics professor Jonathan Gruber, an architect of the statefs 2006
health law and an advisor to President Barack Obama on the national Affordable
Care Act calls the new House proposal gaggressive, broad and visionary.h
gThis is an incredibly hard problem,h said Gruber, speaking on WBURfs Radio Boston today. gWhat I like about
thiscis that itfs really taking the spaghetti approach to cost control; letfs
throw a bunch of things against the wall and see what sticks. Theyfre doing a
bunch of different things all of which might work.h
So, what does it
mean for patients?
Mass. state Rep. Steve Walsh, the House chair of the
joint Committee on Health Care Financing, said the plan would save $160 billion
over 15 years. As far as savings for patients, Walsh said: gThe first thing Ifd
tell [a patient] is five years from now, her family plan is going to be $2,000
cheaper than it is today.h Walsh said businesses would also find their health
costs cut significantly.
House Speaker Robert DeLeo added: gWith this
bill, I think everyonefs gotten a little something they want and everyonefs
gotten a little something they donft want. So thatfs what this legislation is
all about, but at the end of the day, most importantly what itfs going to
provide is some real health care cost containment. Thatfs what the bill is all
about.h
One of the greatest challenges, he said, was to contain costs
while not undermining a key industry in the state, with 1 in 7 jobs here linked
to health care. Clearly some folks will be disappointed that the plan didnft go
far enough. Gov. Deval Patrick introduced legislation in February 2011 that would have
allowed greater government oversight of contracts between insurers and health
care providers and moved more medical groups into global payment systems that
put doctors and medical groups on a budget.
But DeLeo also made the
point that once again, the state is in the forefront of health reform. gI look
at this as Massachusetts being a leader once again in terms of whatfs going on
in the health care field in the country.h
Here are some details of the
House bill, officially the Health Care Quality Improvement and Cost Reduction
Act of 2012, presented today by lawmakers. The state Senate is expected to
introduce its own version of the plan next week.
1. A new,
quasi-governmental agency called the Division of Health Care Cost and Quality
would oversee the transition to the new payment and delivery system with a board
including consumer, government and industry representatives.
2. The plan
establishes a specific cap for health-care spending that would be linked to the
Gross State Product minus .5 percent.
3. The state could impose a 10
percent tax on hospitals if they charged more than 20 percent of the state
median price for a given service and couldnft justify that higher price. (Two
earlier reports by Attorney General Martha Coakley found that certain hospitals
exploited their market clout to charge
higher-than-justified prices). Hospitals would pay this penalty into a
distressed hospital fund for institutions that serve a high proportion of poor
and vulnerable patients.
4. Accountable care organizations would take on greater
prominence, though the bill stresses that joining an ACO would be voluntary for
patients and providers. The bill defines the size of an ACO as bigger than
15,000 people and no larger than 400,000. Patients would have the right to
appeal decisions made by their ACO doctors, and have the right to a second
opinion.
5. The statefs medical establishment would continue its shift
toward global payments and away from fee-for-service systems. The measure would
gtransition the industry to adopt alternative payment methodologies such as
global payments and bundled payments for acute and chronic conditions.h
6. Electronic health records would be required for all providers by
2017.
7. Greater transparency would be attained through detailed pricing
available to consumers on the Web, as well as greater disclosure of
out-of-pocket costs to patients up front.
8. The measure stresses
greater coordination of care through primary care, and the establishment of
gpatient-centered medical homesh so that patients could have a single point of
coordination for all types of care.
9. New rules on medical malpractice
would create a 180-day cooling off period while both side try to negotiate a
settlement. Also, the measure would allow providers to freely offer an apology
to a patient.
10. Under a provision called gsmart tieringh patients
might pay more for more expensive services.
11. The bill would make
several changes to Medicaid, including increasing MassHealth rates paid to
providers.
12. Funding for workforce training and development are
included in the measure, and a provision would forgive loans to primary care
doctors who practice in rural or underserved
areas.
© 2012 Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights
reserved.