Has Reform Improved Health Care Yet?

Has Reform Improved Health Care Yet?

The bulk of the federal health reform law's provisions are slated to launch in 2014, but several incremental changes have already taken effect. An early look at those provisions shows mixed results for insurance access, services utilization and system improvements.

The health reform law is slated to produce sweeping changes in the nation’s provision of health care.

The law funds an unprecedented push for comparative effectiveness research, further incents health care providers to improve their performance and will dramatically expand the Medicaid safety net.

However, the bulk of transformative provisions — from launching health insurance exchanges to introducing new mandates and wellness provisions — are not slated to take effect for several years. The delay is driven by practical considerations, given the health care system’s complex bureaucracy, necessary groundwork for new programs and the sheer number of stakeholders involved.

This years-long implementation process has created some political challenges. 

Much like the economic stimulus, Democrats have been forced to defend legislation that has been politically controversial and without an easily measured immediate impact on patients’ care or costs. Although backers of health reform have touted measures that are designed to help patients and are taking effect this year, critics say that the law has led to unintended consequences that ultimately harm care.

Here’s one look at how the reform has thus far affected care provision across three vectors: access to insurance, health care services utilization and systemic improvement.

Early Efforts To Expand Coverage Have Mixed Effect

The reform law already has carried out a slew of changes intended to broaden access to health insurance, such as permitting states to receive added funds when providing Medicaid coverage to childless adults with incomes up to 133% of the federal poverty level. Several key provisions also took effect last month, such as allowing adult children to remain on their parents’ plans until age 26 and barring insurers from denying coverage to children ages 18 and younger based on pre-existing conditions.

Among the most anticipated changes in 2010 was the recent launch of high-risk insurance pools, which are designed to serve people with pre-existing conditions who have not had health insurance for at least six months. The pools also were established to bridge the 42-month gap between the law’s signing and the launch of health insurance exchanges and the prohibition on insurers’ denying coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.

Enrollment in the high-risk pools thus far has been a disappointment. Federal officials had projected that hundreds of thousands of U.S. residents could qualify for the programs and that more than 350,000 Americans will ultimately enroll in the pools. While total enrollment figures are unclear, officials in September said that some states have had fewer than 100 applicants for their high-risk pools. Only about 140 people had enrolled in the 22 high-risk pools run by the federal government, after about 2,400 applied by early August.

Expanded Screening but Efforts to Tighten Utilization

The reform law stands to have a complex effect on consumers’ use of health care services. Beyond significantly increasing access — which will boost health care providers’ volumes — the law already has made changes that will drive short-term utilization growth, such as changes in coverage for preventive screenings. As of Sept. 23, new health plans and those that have made changes after that date are required to cover certain preventive services, such as colonoscopies, immunizations and mammograms, at no cost to plan members.

At the same time, there is downward pressure to curb procedures that are seen as unnecessary. Paul Levy, CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess, says that his hospital’s CT imaging has decreased by 10% this year, partly because insurers are introducing programs to limit scans before capitated payment kicks in.

These changes do hold positives for patients. For example, curbing unnecessary imaging utilization reduces patients’ radiation exposure, Levy notes, while cutting tests and treatments can hold down growth in health spending. At the same time, some observers worry that the pressure on utilization could lead to insurers ultimately denying needed care and forcing more patients to pay out of pocket.

Systemic Improvement Seen as Positive

Meanwhile, the law has directed billions of dollars into health infrastructure investments, which observers generally agree should improve systemic efficiency, access to and quality of care.

HHS last week announced grants of $727 million to 143 U.S. community health centers to build new clinics and upgrade technology, including more than $85 million for California clinics. Expansion of community health centers has been hailed as a strategy to improve primary care among low-income residents of rural areas and inner cities.

The reform law also has created a groundswell in health information technology spending. Providers seeking to capture new “meaningful use” incentives are rushing to implement electronic health records in outpatient clinics. The change in practice is already apparent: the average hospital now spends about 40% of its capital budget on health IT, roughly double pre-2009 levels. Experts say that the growing use of EHRs should improve providers’ coordination of patient care, although a too-quick expansion of the systems — and a resulting rush in unexpected data errors — could create problems.

Looking Ahead

Assuming that the law’s sweeping efforts represent sufficient reform would be a mistake, some observers say. Writing in Health Affairs, Mark McClellan — former head of CMS — and co-authors Alice Rivlin and David Williams caution that rethinking health care delivery and improving “access alone is not enough” to fix national challenges. Rivlin and Williams co-chaired the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Commission to Build a Healthier America, and the three authors cite that commission’s recommendations on reviewing trends in prevention, nutrition and social changes as necessary steps to improving U.S. health care. According to the authors, ensuring that individuals “can have a healthier future” requires going beyond the reform and looking at “how Americans live, learn,work, and play.”

Here’s a look at other health reform news.

On the Hill

Hammering Out the Details

Analyzing the Overhaul

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