AMA: Insurance megamergers ‘threaten healthcare access, quality and affordability’

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/ama-insurance-megamergers-threaten-healthcare-access-quality-and-afforda/426745/

  • The merger of health insurance giants “would significantly compromise market competition in the health insurance industry and threaten health care access, quality and affordability,” the president of the AMA said as the group released new analyses of the mergers.
  • In the analysis, the AMA claims the Anthem-Cigna merger would diminish competition in 121 metro areas across 14 states, and that the Aetna-Humana merger would diminish it in 51 metro areas across 15 states.
  • The studies also note an “unprecedented lack of competition” that already exists in many states, the AMA says.

http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/news/news/2016/2016-09-21-ama-analyses-support-blocking-mergers.page

 

Skyrocketing Obamacare premiums still lower than employer-sponsored insurance

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/09/19/skyrocketing-obamacare-premiums-still-lower-than-employer-sponsored-insurance/?_hsenc=p2ANqtz–t7xbLX4NaGtlM9xRr6pZktotgAcCHkdRbjKw0L0a6JJqo2b34g_rHwLhWytv8gR0hasqRy3JGk6Ds4u5Qqqd01XazJQ&_hsmi=34585816&utm_campaign=CHL%3A%20Daily%20Edition&utm_content=34585816&utm_medium=email&utm_source=hs_email

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People who warn that President Obama’s health-care law is in dire straits often point to rising health insurance premiums as proof. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has called premium increases on Affordable Care Act exchanges “astronomically high.” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) says premiums have “skyrocketed.”

But are these growing premiums actually high?

A new analysis from the Urban Institute found that the average unsubsidized premiums in the Affordable Care Act exchanges, commonly known as Obamacare, are actually 10 percent lowerthan the full premiums in the average employer plan nationally in 2016.

Nationally, the average employer-sponsored premium was $516 a month, while the unsubsidized marketplace premium was $464. To make an apples-to-apples comparison, the researchers adjusted marketplace premiums to account for the age of enrollees and the different value of the health coverage provided by the marketplace plans.

The exchanges offer health coverage to people who aren’t insured through their jobs, with subsidies based on income. About 11 million people are insured through the marketplaces, compared with about 155 million Americans who receive insurance coverage through employer-provided plans.

Recent news of large insurance carriers pulling out of some states’ marketplaces and hiking premiums in others has raised concerns that offering health insurance through exchanges isn’t sustainable and the health care offered isn’t affordable.

Hospital Readmissions are Not the Enemy

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/quality/hospital-readmissions-are-not-enemy?spMailingID=9540993&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=1001565259&spReportId=MTAwMTU2NTI1OQS2

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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has all but declared war on readmissions. But one researcher suggests that the relationship between readmission rates and quality is flawed.

‘Superbug’ scourge spreads as U.S. fails to track rising human toll

http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-uncounted-surveillance/

Fifteen years after the U.S. declared drug-resistant infections to be a grave threat, the crisis is only worsening, a Reuters investigation finds, as government agencies remain unwilling or unable to impose reporting requirements on a healthcare industry that often hides the problem.

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/quality/hidden-toll-drug-resistant-superbugs-0?spMailingID=9540993&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=1001565259&spReportId=MTAwMTU2NTI1OQS2#

 

We’re closer to a publicly funded health care system than you think

http://blog.academyhealth.org/were-closer-to-a-publicly-funded-health-care-system-than-you-think/

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Every time health care reform comes up for debate, I see people arguing about whether a publicly or privately funded system would be better. The Affordable Care Act, in an attempt to forestall this debate, decided to split the baby, and give half of its newly insured beneficiaries public insurance (Medicaid) and half private insurance (insurance exchanges). But this isn’t really true. Yes, the half of people getting expanded Medicaid are getting public insurance, but the vast majority of people getting private insurance are also getting public funds (subsidies) in order to purchase their private insurance.

In other words, even though we expanded private insurance, we’re doing it with taxpayer dollars. Overall, the reduction in the uninsured was due to mostly public spending, with relatively little private spending overall. This isn’t rare in the US health care system. A recently released policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, “Public Funds Account for Over 70 Percent of Health Care Spending in California“, explains this quite well.

If you just look at a simple analysis of Medicaid, Medicaid, and CHIP, you might find that about 45% (or less than half) of total US health care spending is public. But that ignores a ton of health care spending that is also paid for with public funds outside those programs. In an effort to document the different, researchers looked at health care spending in California. They included four major public funding categories:

  1. Payments for public health insurance programs (like Medicare and Medicaid)
  2. Government payments for health insurance coverage for public employees (like me at Indiana University, for instance)
  3. Tax subsidies for employer-sponsored insurance and those purchasing exchange plans who earn less than 400% of the poverty line
  4. County health care expenditures

 

Candidates Decry High Drug Prices, But They Have Few Options For Voters

http://khn.org/news/candidates-decry-high-drug-prices-but-they-have-few-options-for-voters/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=34504530&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8jV9oGDFPhUY7AIC7h75jL1KC5hMbGnVXQiBbMw7S-o8a9cNbtaq7e7EyhVHZrYWAX2-Oix7Ha5jcF9E7NZ2gAl0hFHg&_hsmi=34504530

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In this year’s presidential campaign, health care has taken a back seat. But one issue appears to be breaking through: the rising cost of prescription drugs.

The blockbuster drugs to treat hepatitis C as well as dramatic price increases on older drugs, most recently the EpiPen allergy treatment, have combined to put the issue back on the front burner.

Democrat Hillary Clinton just issued a lengthy proposal to address what her campaign calls “unjustified price hikes for long-available drugs.” That’s in addition to a broader proposal to address high drug prices the campaign put out last fall.

Republican Donald Trump, meanwhile, has said little about health care since announcing his candidacy in 2015, but he has several times called for a change in law to allowMedicare to negotiate drug prices for the population it serves.

Here are five reasons why this issue is back — and why it is so difficult to solve.

The Missing Debate Over Rising Health-Care Deductibles

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2016/09/18/the-missing-debate-over-rising-health-care-deductibles/?utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=34504530&_hsenc=p2ANqtz–cbQhbJAJ2j-K8I_jQv3kzC6RJuMdvGplQjAJSD–Kc6wYpIZ2CPkYbSLYxHgIpMaHkl9CnoCCH3BO8Sf-cUroX2PTig&_hsmi=34504530

 

Progressives push for ‘public option’ health plan

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/09/15/progressives-push-public-option-health-plan/90375964/

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Progressive senators and activists are launching a campaign Thursday calling for every American to have the choice of a public health insurance option.

Cost Control Efforts Working ‘So Far’ in MA

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/quality/cost-control-efforts-working-so-far-ma?spMailingID=9530189&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=1001355843&spReportId=MTAwMTM1NTg0MwS2#

Health policy veteran Stuart Altman, PhD, is hopeful, but not optimistic, about healthcare delivery reforms and thinks hospitals will be forced to bring costs down because patients won't tolerate any more cost shifting.

Health policy veteran Stuart Altman, PhD, is hopeful, but not optimistic, about healthcare delivery reforms and thinks hospitals will be forced to bring costs down because patients won’t tolerate any more cost shifting.

health care expenditures 2013-2015

Each year, we put together a cost trend report that outlines what forces are at play in the state in terms of raising spending and we have hearings every October. We are trying to play an interesting role which is not be regulatory, but really to be in the face of the healthcare system in terms of saying, “Hey  be careful. Don’t go the extra mile on in spending or pricing.”

We want to do it in a way that doesn’t destroy or even hurt the health system.  In any attempt to do that, some of the forces within the health industry scream.

But, for the most part, the hospitals have been supportive of our efforts. If we were to squeeze too hard, they would react more negatively. Everyone is engaged in a very interesting balancing act. We are trying getting the system to work more efficiently… and they are trying to control costs without destroying themselves. So far it’s working.