White House Talks Up Cost-Savings Plans To Bolster Reform

White House Talks Up Cost-Savings Plans To Bolster Reform

Officials in the Obama administration are firing back against questions that Democratic health care reform proposals do not adequately address rising health care costs.  For instance, Anthem Blue Cross of California's parent company put out a study this month projecting that the plans would result in higher premiums.

Perhaps fearing a repeat of the demise of the 2007 health care reform effort in California, the White House is making a deliberate effort to play up provisions of Democratic health care reform bills aimed at controlling health care costs.

Legislation aimed at overhauling California’s health care system went down in flames in January 2008 after a report from the state Legislative Analyst’s Office projected that the overhaul would leave the state with a $4 billion shortfall within five years if costs exceeded expectations.

On Oct. 26,  White House Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag blogged that provisions in the Senate Finance Committee’s proposal and reform plans in the House would directly tackle health care costs in part by:

Those proposals and others aimed at “bending the cost curve” could likely be the key to getting health care reform legislation through Congress this year.  In a time of record budget deficits, it should come as no surprise that so many members of Congress are paying close attention to the Congressional Budget Office’s cost projections.

And in some cases, lawmakers are second-guessing CBO and asking it to take a second look.  On Oct. 21, West Virginia Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller challenged CBO’s most recent projections of the cost savings that could stem from enacting tort reform. 

In an Oct. 9 letter to Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), CBO projected that tort reform would cut federal spending by $41 billion over 10 years and reduce the federal deficit by $54 billion. These reductions were attributed to a decrease in so-called defensive medicine, or unnecessary medical services that doctors provide to protect themselves against lawsuits.

But Rockefeller said that the numbers provided to Sen. Hatch run counter to previous CBO findings on malpractice reform.  Rockefeller laid out eight questions for CBO, including whether a reduction in medical services would compromise Americans’ health in any way.

CBO’s numbers aren’t the only ones drawing criticism on Capitol Hill.  On Oct. 22, WellPoint — the parent company of Anthem Blue Cross of California — released a study projecting that health care reform proposals would result in higher health insurance costs.  In the report, the insurer presented a series of case studies for a number of states where it does business.

For California’s individual market, WellPoint estimates that premiums will increase by 122% for younger/healthy people and by 53% for people of average age/average health.  Older, less healthy people would see premiums decrease by 37% on the individual market, according to WellPoint.

Democrats in Congress roundly criticized the report, much as they have other data health insurers have released in recent weeks.

This week’s “Road to Reform” has more on the administration’s push for health care reform and the latest on insurers’ efforts to influence the debate. 

Administration’s Message

House

Debate Over an Excise Tax

Insurers at the Table

Shaping the Debate

Polls

Exit mobile version