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Health/Medical
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Title: RomneyCare Brings High Healthcare Costs, Calls for Price Controls
Source: NA.com
URL Source: http://thenewamerican.com/usnews/he ... costs-calls-for-price-controls
Published: Jul 1, 2011
Author: Michael Tennant
Post Date: 2011-07-01 21:23:45 by CZ82
Keywords: None
Views: 1654
Comments: 1

RomneyCare Brings High Healthcare Costs, Calls for Price Controls

Written by Michael Tennant

Wednesday, 29 June 2011 00:00

Anyone who believes ObamaCare will mean lower healthcare costs and higher-quality healthcare has only to look to the state that has been suffering under the prototype for ObamaCare for the past five years to be disabused of such notions. Massachusetts’ healthcare costs far exceed those of other states; and now Bay State legislators and Gov. Deval Patrick (D) are resorting to the age-old, destined-to-fail approach to high costs: price controls. The result, of course, will be a shortage of quality healthcare.

Since 2006, when then-Gov. Mitt Romney (R) signed Massachusetts’ so-called universal coverage law, Bay State spending for privately insured residents has “far outpaced national growth,” according to the Boston Globe, while access to healthcare has suffered. Last year the Wall Street Journal reported that average insurance premiums in Massachusetts are the highest in the nation; small business costs have increased by 5.8 percent since RomneyCare was instituted; and per capita health spending is 27 percent higher than the national average (15 percent higher when adjusted for local wages and research grants).

It isn’t hard to figure out why. By forcing insurers to cover everyone regardless of pre-existing conditions and by piling on mandated coverage and various other regulatory burdens, RomneyCare virtually guaranteed that healthcare costs would skyrocket. Insurers, naturally, wanted to raise their premiums to cover the higher costs. But as John R. Graham of the Pacific Research Institute explained:

Because it was politically intolerable to allow premiums to rise in line with the costs of Romneycare, the state’s insurance commissioner denied 235 of 276 rate increase requests in April 2010. For a short time, no new policies were offered, and plans suffered significant losses. The next month, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, the state’s largest carrier, announced a $55 million provision for anticipated losses in the second quarter alone.

Saving face for politicians who had voted for RomneyCare isn’t the only reason for denying premium increases. An even bigger problem is that the state heavily subsidizes the purchase of health insurance, so any rate hikes also take a toll on the Bay State budget.

With state healthcare spending spiraling out of control, Gov. Patrick decided it was time to double down on the state’s attempts to buck the laws of economics. He introduced legislation to enforce price controls on hospitals and other healthcare providers.

State legislators, at Patrick’s request, are now writing their own price-control proposal, and they are “saying they would go further than Patrick did in his recent legislation,” the Globe reports.

A key component of their proposal, they said, would be to address inequities in what insurers pay hospitals and doctors groups, as highlighted in a report released last week by Attorney General Martha Coakley’s staff. Providers with brand names or geographical dominance, her staff concluded, are able to demand higher prices than others for providing similar care.

Under socialist systems, however, such inequities are not to be permitted. Therefore, says the paper,

The governor and many legislators want to move to a system of “global payments,’’ in which providers are paid a monthly per-patient budget for care, rather than allowing them to bill for each separate service rendered to a patient, with few limits on the number of services.

In other words, healthcare providers are going to get a fixed amount per patient regardless of how much treatment those patients require. One doesn’t have to be an economist to figure out what will happen: Patients with conditions requiring expensive treatments will find it harder and harder to obtain treatment, and those who are treated can expect providers to cut corners to stay under their state-allotted budgets — the very negation of the stated purpose of RomneyCare.

Legislators are not even trying to couch their attempts at price controls in less-loaded terminology. Rep. Steven Walsh (D), chairman of the House Committee on Health Care Financing, said, “We will be bolder and more aggressive than ever before,” adding that “he wants to offer the market ‘more concrete goals’ for controlling prices,” the Globe writes.

His Senate counterpart, Sen. Richard Moore (D), stated, “Our concern turns to outrage when we learn that there is no direct correlation between the cost of health care and the quality of care received.” Taxpayers may be similarly outraged over the seemingly inverse correlation between the cost of government and the quality of services received, but that doesn’t seem to bother Moore. In fact, he’s going to stick it to taxpayers even further: The Globe says the bill that he expects the legislature to pass “will contain stronger incentives for residents to join wellness and prevention programs” — that is, state-enforced behavior modification.

Such behavior modification will be necessary because price controls will fail to curb costs. Instead, by keeping prices below market level, they will ensure reduced supply and quality of care. Thus, individuals will be forced to adopt state-mandated “healthy lifestyles” so that they don’t become a burden on the system. If that fails to cut costs, as it almost certainly will, the state will do what all socialist systems ultimately do: ration scarce goods and services, in this case healthcare.

Knowing how quickly RomneyCare has resulted in skyrocketing healthcare costs, reduced access to healthcare, and calls for price and lifestyle controls ought to make anyone worry about how quickly ObamaCare will wreak similar havoc on the whole country’s healthcare. Nullification and repeal of that federal monstrosity now seem more urgent than ever before.

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#1. To: CZ82 (#0)

‘RomneyCare’ — a revolution that basically worked

The former governor’s health plan is a policy piñata among his rivals. But a detailed Globe review finds the overhaul has achieved its main goals without devastating state finances. The remaining worry is future costs.

http://articles.boston.com/2011-06-26/lifestyle/29706413_1_overhaul-mitt-romney-health-care

-----

Ã2; The percentage of residents without insurance coverage is down dramatically, to less than 2 percent; for children, the figure is a tiny fraction of 1 percent, a state survey shows. These are by far the lowest rates in the nation.

Ã2; Many more businesses are offering insurance to employees than were before the law. The fear going in was that the opposite would happen.

Ã2; The cost of the changes, while large, has proved manageable thus far, though there are some serious warning signs on the horizon, especially as federal stimulus funds, which have helped defray the cost, run out.

Ã2; The plan remains exceptionally popular among state residents — indeed its popularity has only grown with time. There are some unhappy sectors — notably small business owners, who had hoped to see moderating premiums and chafe, in some cases, at the heavy-handed enforcement of the rules by the state. And support for the requirement that individuals obtain insurance is down to a slender majority, a recent poll shows. But there is no significant constituency here for repeal.

Ã2; And while health care costs continue to grow at alarming rates, as they have nationally, the consensus of industry leaders and health care economists is that this trend cannot be fairly traced to the makeover but rather to cost pressures baked into the existing health care payment system. Massachusetts does have the highest health care costs in the nation, but it owned this dubious distinction long before “RomneyCare’’ was born.

Taken in sum, it is a far cry from what critics of Romney, and of Obama, are saying about the Massachusetts plan. The attacks often rely on distortions, omissions or flagrant inaccuracies, and typically ignore the fact that the law accomplished its principal goal — expanding coverage to nearly every citizen.

"Thats because your basically and idiot."
Badeye posted on 2011-04-29 10:30:22 ET

go65  posted on  2011-07-02   0:00:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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