Five Health Care Issues To Watch in 2012

Five Health Care Issues To Watch in 2012

Mark your calendars: A slew of ACA-related payment reforms, health IT changes and health insurance exchange updates will debut next year -- even as constitutional questions over the law come to an end. (Maybe.)

Not to be a Grinch, but “Road to Reform” doesn’t celebrate the 12 days of Christmas.

We do, however, cherish the 10 years of staggered Affordable Care Act implementation.

It’s the gift that keeps on giving for health wonks — and columnists on the health reform beat.

After a packed 2011, here are five issues springing out of last year’s reform law that bear watching in 2012.

1. The Supreme Court battle over ACA

It’s an open question: Are those 10 years of reforms even constitutional?

The high court is poised to give its answer next year.

Health wonks already have circled March 26-March 28 on their calendars, when the justices will devote a record five-and-a-half hours of oral argument to discuss the Affordable Care Act’s legality.

The current schedule:

The case matches the Obama administration against the National Federation of Independent Business and 26 states. Based on split lower-court decisions and the current roster of justices, predictions about the high court’s verdict — whether the law will be upheld, partially struck or fully struck down — are all over the map.

But veteran court watchers do offer one near-guarantee: A hearing in March means a ruling by June.

2. The payment reforms contained in ACA

Regardless of the law’s long-term future, a bevy of ACA cost-control pilots and quality-improvement initiatives will formally debut in the coming weeks.

The sheer momentum of these initiatives could reshape how the industry pays for care.

“It should be a landmark year as several key programs — the Pioneer ACO Model, the Shared Savings Program, the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Initiative and the Health Care Innovation Challenge — all launch across 2012,” the Advisory Board Company’s Rob Lazerow told California Healthline.

(The Advisory Board Company produces California Healthline for the California HealthCare Foundation.)

Notably, the Pioneer program — which includes six California organizations among its 32 participants — goes online on Jan. 1. The HHS initiative is designed to reward health systems that are already prepared to assume new risks as “accountable care organizations” — for example, by taking on more population management responsibilities.

Meanwhile, the $1 billion Innovation Challenge is a grant-making program that incents new workforce and care delivery models. Provider applications are due next month.

Lazerow, who’s spoken with dozens of hospitals and health systems, added that “leaders of progressive organizations are excited” to choose from the range of voluntary payment innovations.

3. The health insurance exchanges mandated by ACA

The Obama administration’s final rule on health insurance exchanges is slated to be released in early 2012, about two years before the Jan. 1, 2014 deadline for states to have them up and running.

Critics are saying that might be too late.

Launching a health insurance exchange will require months of technical work and considerable financial investment. As Health Access details, California is moving quickly to get its exchange up and running. But many other legislatures continue to wrestle — especially with the law facing unresolved court challenges —  between crafting their own insurance exchanges or defaulting to a yet-to-be-defined federal alternative.

HHS is expected to announce details of that fallback option by June. But the actual federal exchange may not be ready by 2014, either.

“It will be an enormous uphill battle to get this thing launched on time,” health industry consultant Robert Laszewski told Kaiser Health News. “[Federal officials] have a Herculean task, even if everyone was cooperating.”

4. The health IT needed to bring ACA to life

The insurance exchanges aren’t alone in needing an injection of technical know-how.

Achieving the ACA’s promise of affordable, quality care will require health care providers to adopt sophisticated technologies that monitor patients and enable effective data transmission.

At the center of this effort is the government’s meaningful use incentive program to encourage electronic health record adoption. John Lynn, a blogger at Health IT Blog Network, predicted that next year would see more of the same; 2012 “will be all about Meaningful Use: Meaningful Use, ACOs, Meaningful Use … and a little more Meaningful Use covered in Meaningful Use,” according to Lynn. 

EHRs’ rise also will allow providers to start combing through large health information sets. Writing in iHealthBeatCalifornia Healthline‘s sister publication — Jane Sarasohn-Kahn notes that data analytics for addressing readmissions rates “should take off in 2012,” given the ACA’s financial incentives for controlling hospital readmission rates.

Meanwhile, health IT expert Brian Ahier flagged another pending development: The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT’s pending rule on Nationwide Health Information Network (NwHIN) governance.

The proposed rule — which ONC is expected to publish in early 2012 — will address a number of key health IT policy and governance questions, Ahier told California Healthline. For example, it will establish “rules of the road” for all NwHIN participants to be confident in the health information exchanges’ security and confidentiality, he said.

5. The election to decide ACA’s future

Austin Frakt — a health economist and blogger at The Incidental Economist — has spent weeks writing about the Medicare premium-support debate, health care cost controls and a range of other reform topics.

Yet Frakt knows that next November is already casting a long shadow over his policy debates.

“As a policy wonk it pains me,” Frakt said, “[but] the election is more important to long-term health policy than anything else in 2012.”

Simply put, if President Obama wins re-election — and the Supreme Court upholds the law — the ACA is probably here to stay.

(It’s not inconceivable that economic issues or a major backlash could force Obama to retreat from a Democratic law; President George H.W. Bush oversaw a repeal of President Reagan’s Medicare Catastrophic Care Act.)

But if a Republican takes the White House, the ACA’s future is immediately in flux. Although it would be very difficult for that president to roll back the law entirely, given the steady implementation of reforms and the health industry’s own push to keep the law alive.

And more than the ACA is in the balance next year. A Republican victory might mean a turn toward premium support models after all, with the Wyden-Ryan Medicare reform plan gaining favor among the GOP presidential candidates.

Publishing Break

“Road to Reform” will return in 2012 — making predictions about what 2013 holds for health care, no doubt — as California Healthline goes on a publishing break starting Friday.

And to help you have a very wonky holiday, here’s one last national roundup of reform news for 2011.

Administration Actions

Effects on States

In the States

On the Campaign Trail

On the Hill

Rolling Out Reform

Studying Its Effects

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