How Reform Could Affect Four Key Populations

How Reform Could Affect Four Key Populations

A health policy expert explores how the national health reform would affect four groups of U.S. residents. While younger workers are poised to benefit, Medicare beneficiaries may feel cuts.

A new article in Health Affairs by Joseph Newhouse, a professor of health policy at Harvard University, examines how the health care overhaul will affect four patient populations.

The article was based on a presentation given at UC-San Francisco, and the article and lecture received funding support from the California HealthCare Foundation, which is the publisher of California Healthline.

For his analysis, Newhouse split the U.S. population according to type of health coverage — or lack of coverage — noting that while younger Americans might benefit from reform, Medicare beneficiaries may experience new challenges.

The Uninsured and People Covered by Medicaid

According to Newhouse, roughly 90 million U.S. residents are covered by Medicaid, are presently eligible or will be eligible in 2014 to apply for the program. Beyond creating funding challenges for states, Newhouse notes that the impact of new Medicaid beneficiaries will vary by state and could force federal and state governments to square off on funding and even audit individuals covered by Medicaid to establish match rates.

The Medicaid expansion also could affect access to care for current and new beneficiaries. Although the overhaul in 2013 and 2014 creates incentives for primary care providers to treat Medicaid patients, there is no similar bulwark for specialist payment rates, Newhouse notes. With fewer specialists willing to treat Medicaid beneficiaries, many newly insured patients may continue to seek out care at safety-net providers, leading to a surge of demand and need for community health centers to add staff.

People Covered by Individual and Small-Group Insurance

Analogizing the health care overhaul to refurbishing a home, Newhouse posits that the “house would be totally gutted,” as new protections are instituted for individual and small-group insurance and as many as 20 million individuals gain coverage through that market.

Newhouse thinks that the individual mandate, as well as new insurance restrictions that nix exclusions and require a level of minimum benefits, will cure this market of “dysfunction” by creating a healthier pool of enrollees and reducing the “phenomenon of adverse selection,” which forces many individuals with chronic conditions to pay extremely high premiums or go without coverage altogether.

Another result of reform is that some individuals who suffered “job lock” — and were loath to switch employers out of fear of losing health coverage — may now change firms or strike out as independent contractors, Newhouse notes. Meanwhile, about 15 million U.S. residents who are currently uninsured will be required to obtain health coverage under the individual mandate, which takes effect in 2014.

The overhaul also may shake up the role of insurance agents, who have long acted as brokers for this market and take a commission on coverage sales, further driving up distribution costs. Already, some agents fear they will become an “endangered species,” and their industry’s future may be determined by the structure of the new insurance exchanges.

People Covered by Midsize and Large Employers

The 45% of U.S. residents who have health insurance through midsize and large employers will likely be the “least affected” by the reform law, according to Newhouse. Most larger firms currently offer health coverage and are expected to continue to do so. Many firms also self-insure and have a diverse patient population, eliminating fears about adverse selection.

However, a new tax on insurers to help fund the overhaul might be passed along to people covered by employer-based insurance in the form of higher premiums. The so-called “Cadillac tax” on high-premium plans, which would take effect in 2018, also may have implications for this population depending on how the measure is implemented.

People Covered by Medicare

Beneficiaries of Medicare, which covers about 45 million U.S. residents, can expect several positives to come from reform, Newhouse notes. For example, the overhaul essentially closes the so-called “doughnut hole” in the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit and establishes a voluntary long-term care option.

More broadly, Newhouse acknowledges that — for the first time — funding will be shifted from Medicare to subsidize health insurance coverage and other programs for younger people. Taxes from younger workers historically supported Medicare and Social Security for older people since the programs’ beginnings. However, about 50% of the funding for health reform is slated to come from reducing Medicare payments to hospitals, insurers and other health care providers.

As a result, the reform law may have a significant negative effect for Medicare beneficiaries. Medicare Advantage rates are frozen for next year, and MA beneficiaries will likely see benefit cuts. Moreover, the pressure to curb overall Medicare spending is expected to rise across the coming years, particularly as government officials grow increasingly worried about the growing national deficit. The politically undesirable result could be reductions in Medicare payment rates that go beyond expected cuts, Newhouse writes, where Medicare reimbursements to providers fall significantly below payments from commercial insurers. Such changes could lead to a two-tiered delivery system — those covered by Medicare and Medicaid versus those covered by private insurance. Already, more well-off Medicare beneficiaries are turning to concierge medicine programs to secure access to physicians.

Conservatives already have criticized the overhaul for redirecting Medicare funding toward covering younger U.S. residents. The new law “create[s] a new entitlement for a separate group of people rather than strengthening” Medicare, according to Stuart Butler, vice president of the Heritage Foundation. In addition, many elderly U.S. residents are angered by the impending cuts. Their resistance worries some Democrats because seniors typically vote in large numbers, especially during midterm elections. According to the Wall Street Journal, seniors represent “a political force that is disproportionate to their numbers.

Here’s a look at what else is happening in health reform.

Role of State Insurance Officials

Eye on the Insurance Industry

Spotlight on Maryland

Administration Actions

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