Premium Freeze in Massachusetts?




Today’s Managing Health Care Costs Indicator is 0




Health Care for All, an advocacy group that played a substantive role in passing health care reform here in Massachusetts, has come out in favor of a health insurance premium freeze.    They cite the case of Sarah Higginbotham, who says her biweekly take-home pay for a part time job at a church used to be $900, but has dwindled to $164 since she now has a family plan and health insurance premiums have risen by double digits each year.

Premium increases are caused by a combination of increased unit prices, increased utilization, increased intensity of services, and increased burden of illness.  Price increases could be substantially decreased or eliminated quickly, although that might take price controls.   Lifestyle change can lower burden of illness, but not by 2012.  Increased utilization can be changed – but takes some time.  Increased intensity of service sometimes represents innovations that can save lives (such as today's New England Journal, which has an article showing that screening CT scans for those at high risk for lung cancer can save lives. More on that in a future post.)  


Most insurance funded by large insurers is “self insured,” so that the stated premium is irrelevant – as the employer pays the bills.  However, smaller employers need to purchase “fully funded” insurance –so the level of stated premium is the price paid by the employer and employee.   A premium freeze would be a big break for small employers and nonprofits.   But it won’t be easy to achieve, and lower premium increases will only be sustainable with genuine change in the health care delivery system.

Health insurers in Massachusetts could offer a premium freeze on fully-insured health plans by one of the following methods:


Lower Profits:
Some insurers have high profit margins, and could endure a year of a premium freeze just be accepting lower profits.  However, Massachusetts insurers generally have low profit margins.


Lower administrative costs:
Administrative costs for the nonprofit regional health plans here are also on the low side nationally.   Administrative costs represent less than 10% of total premium, and the claims must be paid – so that wouldn’t likely achieve enough savings to allow for a premium freeze.


Lower provider payments The Attorney General’s report documents that some providers receive higher unit payments, and also have higher risk-adjusted total medical expense costs.  However, each health plan would need to reopen negotiations with multiple providers to get lower prices.  The market has determined those prices – so it won’t be easy to change these quickly.  Remember also that we don’t have providers with huge profit margins. So, significant provider pay cuts will likely cause job loss and attempts to cost-shift to payers that have less leverage.


 Lower medical costs Health plans have been performing medical management for years – and these programs can make a difference, especially for high risk patients.  Health management programs aren’t cheap, though, and they take a substantial amount of time to pay off.   I don’t imagine that plans to increase medical management or to improve healthy lifestyles of Massachusetts residents will make huge difference in health care costs in 2012.


Cost-shifting Insurers could raise premiums elsewhere to cover the lost revenue from a premium freeze.  Again, the market wouldn’t make this easy – and some national insurers might leave the state.


Risk-shifting Insurers could avoid insuring the sickest patients – and could therefore avoid premium increases.  However, regulation of the small group market makes it difficult for health plans to selectively enroll healthy patients.

So, I’m not optimistic we’ll achieve a health insurance premium freeze in Massachusetts in 2012.  However, hats off to Health Care for All for humanizing the impact of health care premium increases.   I think this conversation can help push meaningful change in health care delivery that could lower future health care cost increases.

Bring Back the Mystery Shopper Survey






Today’s Managing Health Care Cost Indicator is $8.76 billion

The Obama Administration announced yesterday that it would halt its “mystery shopper” survey,  which would have assessed potential primary care access problems.  Under the program, a survey company would have called physician offices three times – posing as a new patient with an urgent problem (coughing up blood) or a routine need (annual physical exam).   The mystery shopper survey would have sampled just under 5000 physicians in 9 states, and about 500 of them would have gotten a third call,  asking on behalf of the Department of Health and Human Services if the office accepted private insurance, public insurance, and self-pay patients. 

Physicians expressed anger at the proposed mystery shopper survey – likening it to “snooping” and “Big Brother.”  One physician said

Is this a good use of tax money? Probably not. Everybody with a brain knows we do not have enough doctors.

The survey was to have cost $347,370.  

Although there is a general sense that there is a shortage of primary care physicians, not everyone agrees that we have a physician shortage. 

The senior researchers of the Dartmouth Atlas,   for instance, point out that newly trained physicians often don’t choose primary care, and they mostly settle in areas that already appear to have adequate or excess supply.   Without question, training more physicians costs more federal dollars (Medicare paid $8.76 billion toward graduate medical education in 2008.)  Furthermore, new physicians will generate more bills for their own services, and will order tests and drugs and other physician referrals, leading to still more expenses.

I know it's hard to find a primary care physician in metro Boston, but I’m not sure of the right answer about whether we need more physicians.  I believe that we need a differential way to drive new physicians toward primary care rather than specialties.  Further, I believe we need to get physicians out of doing work that can be done by nonphysicians, and increase use and supply of nurse practitioners and physician assistants.

The mystery shopper survey appears to me to be a well-designed and much-needed study. How can we be sure we have the right diagnosis if we don’t collect the right information?  The Obama Administration should not have backed down.

Biotech Firms Oppose the Independent Payment Advisory Board


Today’s Managing Health Cost Indicator is 3403


Today’s Boston Globe  highlights the full court press the Massachusetts biotechnology industry is making to convince Senator John Kerry to oppose the Independent Payment Advisory Board, Section 3403 of the Affordable Care Act.  The IPAB, which is opposed by drug companies, some physicians, and the biotechnology companies, would create an independent board which would make recommendations for lowering Medicare costs if those costs continued to increase.  Congress would have to vote these recommendations up or down without amendment – like military base closings. 

The current debt ceiling debate shows how hard it is for Congress to lower the cost of the federal government – and many of the necessary solutions to our escalating health care costs will be easily subject to demagoguery like claims of “death panels” and “bureaucratic government throttling private-sector innovation.”

Henry Aaron, in this week’s New England Journal, calls the IPAB “Congress’s Good Deed.”   He says

Among the most important attributes of legislative statesmanship is self-abnegation — the willingness of legislators to abstain from meddling in matters they are poorly equipped to manage.

If the IPAB is effective, it will lower potential profits in biotechnology.  It would be hard otherwise to control burgeoning health care costs.

Kerry’s spokeswoman said

If we’re going to protect taxpayers and control costs, it seems a little bonkers to eliminate something the experts say is our best hope of doing that before we even have a chance to evaluate it

I hope Senator Kerry will stand his ground.