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Brian Colby Policy Director

Brian&Colby&& Policy&Director& - Missouri Catholic … · &Lobbyist &Analyst &Communicator/Reporter& Former&Small&Business&Owner& ... • Brian&Colby& • [email protected]&

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Brian  Colby    Policy  Director  

Who  Am  I?  

Policy  Director  

 Lobbyist    Analyst    Communicator/Reporter  

Former  Small  Business  Owner  

What  do  we  call  it?  

•  PaBent  ProtecBon  and  Affordable  Care  Act  •  PPACA  •  ACA  •  Obamacare  

•  Health  Reform  

•  Whatever  you  call  it,  it  is  what  it  is.  

What  is  the  Status  of  the  Law  

•  On  March  23,  2010,  President  Obama  signed  into  law  the  PaBent  ProtecBon  and  Affordable  Care  Act.    

•  In  a  June  28,  2012  decision,  the  U.S.  Supreme  Court  upheld  much  of  the  ACA,  but  struck  down  a  requirement  that  states  expand  their  Medicaid  program  or  face  financial  penalBes.  The  Medicaid  expansion  will  now  be  op#onal  for  the  states.  

•  Medicaid  is  a  joint  federal  and  state  program  that  provides  health  coverage  for  certain  low-­‐income  individuals  and  families.  

November  ElecBons  

•  Changes  in  leadership  in  the  Senate  and  at  the  White  House  could  see  the  repeal  of  the  law  or  major  changes.  

•  For  now,  it  is  what  it  is  unBl  it  changes.  

Decisions  for  the  MO  Legislature  

•  1.    Should  Missouri  establish  a  “state  based”  health  insurance  exchange  or  allow  the  federal  government  create  one  for  Missourians  to  use?  

•  2.  Should  Missouri  expand  its  Medicaid  program?  

What  About  Abor+on  in  a  possible  Medicaid  Expansion?  

•  The  Medicaid  expansion  is  governed  by  the  same  aborBon  restricBons  as  provided  in  the  regular  Medicaid  program.  For  many  years  Medicaid  has  been  subject  to  the  Hyde  Amendment,  which  prohibits  the  use  of  Medicaid  monies  for  aborBons  or  aborBon  coverage,  except  when  necessary  to  save  the  life  of  the  mother  or  in  cases  of  rape  and  incest.  The  Hyde  Amendment,  however,  is  an  annual  rider  to  the  Medicaid  appropriaBon.    – MO  Catholic  Conference  Medicaid  Fact  Sheet  2012  

Mandated  Benefits,  SB  749  and  Religious  Liberty  

•  SB  749  passed,  was  vetoed  and  the  veto  was  overridden    

•  A  lawsuit  has  been  filed  to  challenge  the  regulaBons.  

•  No  more  acBon  in  front  of  the  state  on  this  issue  for  now.  

What  was  Congress  Thinking?  Employers  

drop  coverage  

Fewer  payers  in  the  market  

Causes  increases  in  cost  

More  employers  

drop  coverage  

Cost  go  up  

Self  Reinforcing  NegaBve  Feedback  Loop  

Cost  Rising  Faster  than  Income  

•  Health  Care  Cost  have  been  going  up  4  Bmes  our  NaBonal  Income  -­‐  GDP  

•  Since  1980  it  has  doubled  every  10  years.  

•  The  government  pays  a  large  share  of  over  all  health  care  spending.  

•  Rising  costs  of  health  care  is  taking  up  a  larger  and  larger  share  of  the  budget  

Really  Smart  People  

•  Jonathan  Gruber,  PhD  at  MIT  – adverse  selecBon  and  the  self  reinforcing  negaBve  feedback  loop  

•  Len  Nichols,  PhD  at  George  Washington  U  

 -­‐”If  we  can  control  the  rising  cost  of  health    care,  we  can’t  pay  back  the  Chinese.”  

Why  are  Cost    Rising?  

Good  quesBon:    -­‐if  you  ask  a  health  care  economist  he  or  she  will  likely  tell  you  that  we  do  not  have  a  Global  Budget.  

“If  you  don’t  have  a  global  budget,  you  might  as  well  be  squeezing  a  balloon.    If  you  try  and  squeeze  cost  at  one  

end  it  just  pops  out  the  other.”    -­‐  Uwe  Reinhardt,  PhD,  Professor  at  Princeton      

Health  Insurance  Coverage  of  the  Nonelderly  Popula+on,  2010  

266.0 Million

SOURCE: KCMU/Urban Institute analysis of 2011 ASEC Supplement to the CPS.

Private Non-group 5.5%

Nonelderly  Uninsured  by    Poverty  Levels  and  Age,  2010  

Total = 49.1 million uninsured

Note: Federal Poverty Level (FPL) for a family of four in 2010 is $22,050/year. Children includes all individuals under age 19. SOURCE: KCMU/Urban Institute analysis of 2011 ASEC Supplement to the CPS.

<138% FPL 139-399% FPL 400%+ FPL

Children

10%

Adults 44%

Children

5%

Adults 32%

Children 1%

Adults 8%

Access to Insurance through the Workplace by Income, 2005

Source: Urban Institute analysis of the February and March 2005 CPS Supplements, 2006, for the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured.

Percent of employees not offered insurance through own or spouse’s employer

Percent of Federal Poverty Level

The  CorrelaBon    between  Income  and  Employer  

Sponsored  Insurance  

•  The  higher  the  income  the  more  likely  you  will  be  offered  insurance  at  work.  

•  The  lower  the  income  the  least  likely  you  will  be  offered  insurance  at  work.  

•  There  is  an  inverse  correlaBon  between  your  ability  to  pay  and  your  need  to  pay  for  your  own  insurance.    In  our  system,  if  you  need  insurance  chances  are  you  can’t  afford  it  and  if  you  can  afford  it,  chances  are  you  don’t  need  it.  

The  Market  is    Broken  at  the  Low  Income  Scale  

•  If  your  customer  has  no  money,  you  have  no  market.  

•  The  private  marketplace  is  becoming  out  of  reach  for  low  income  workers.  

Average Annual Premiums for Single and Family Coverage, 1999-2012

* Estimate is statistically different from estimate for the previous year shown (p<.05).

Source: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Benefits, 1999-2012.

$15,745*

Establishment  Offer  Rates  by  Size  and  Average  Worker  Earnings,  2000-­‐2005  

Notes: Wages cutoffs are adjusted for inflation to 2005 dollars.

Source: Kaiser Family Foundation calculations based on data from the National Compensation Survey, 2000-2005, conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Off

er R

ate

Average Worker Earnings

Who  Cares?  

•  Why  does  coverage  mader?  

Barriers  to  Health  Care  Among  Nonelderly  Adults,  by  Insurance  Status,  2009  

* In past 12 months. Respondents who said usual source of care was the emergency room were included among those not having a usual source of care. SOURCE: KCMU analysis of 2009 NHIS data.

Percent of adults (age 18 – 64) reporting:

Diagnosis  of  Late-­‐Stage  Cancer  Uninsured  vs.  Privately  Insured  

NOTE: Odds ratios were adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, facility type, region, and income and education on basis of postal code. They represent the odds of being diagnosed with stage III or state IV cancer vs. stage I cancer. Analysis based on cases occurring between 1998-2004. SOURCE: Kaiser Family Foundation, based on Halpern MT et al, Association of insurance status and ethnicity with cancer stage at diagnosis for 12 cancer sites: a retrospective analysis." The Lancet Oncology. March 2008.

Equal likelihood between

Uninsured and Insured

Ratio of probability of diagnosis of late vs. early stage cancer, Uninsured/private insurance

•  EMTALA  •  Emergency  Medical  TransportaBon  and  AcBve  Labor  Act    –  Passed  1986  signed  into  law  by  President  Ronald  Reagan  –  mandates  that  hospitals  treat  and  stabilize  paBents  with  emergency  medical  condiBons  regardless  of  their  ability  to  pay.  

–  Hospitals  agreed  to  take  on  this  role  in  part  because  of  a  federal  promise  to  pay  disproporBonate  share  hospital  (DSH)  payments  to  hospitals  that  saw  the  uninsured.    These  payments  will  phase  down  with  the  anBcipaBon  of  health  reform  increasing  coverage  for  more  people.    This  will  be  important.  

Hospitals’  Role  

Emergency  Room  Care  is  the  Most  Expensive  

•  $1000  versus  $100  

•  People  without  insurance  uBlizing  this  system  puts  burdens  on  hospitals  that  forces  hospitals  to  raise  prices  for  everybody.  

•  Health  reform  said  we  need  to  cover  people  to  start  to  bring  down  cost.  

How  do  we  bring  everyone  into  the  System?  

•  Cover  the  very  low  income  workers  with  publicly  financed  insurance  via  Medicaid.  

•  Cover  the  middle  income  folks  not  covered  at  work,  including  small  businesses,  family  farmers  and  sole  proprietors  on  to  the  exchange  that  provides  affordable  insurance.  

New  Requirements  

•  Everybody  needs  to  find  coverage  somehow  •  Medicare  –  disabled  and  over  65  

•  Medicaid  for  lowest  income  

•  Dependents  –  on  parents  unBl  26  •  Exchange  –  some  small  business,  family  farmers,  sole  proprietors  of  modest  income  

•  TradiBonal  Employer  based  coverage  

Expanding  Coverage  Under  the  Affordable  Care  Act  

*  Medicaid  also  includes  other  public  programs:  CHIP,  other  state  programs,  Medicare  and  military-­‐related  coverage.  The  federal  poverty  level  for  a  family  of  three  in  2012  is  $19,090.    Numbers  may  not  add  to  100  due  to  rounding.        SOURCE:  KCMU/Urban  InsBtute  analysis  of  2011  ASEC  Supplement  to  the  CPS.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                

<139% (Medicaid)

Federal Poverty Level

139-399% (Subsidies)

400%+

Private Non-Group

Medicaid*

Employer-Sponsored Insurance

Uninsured

266 M Nonelderly

The  new  voluntary  marketplace  The  Exchange  

•  Web-­‐based  shopping  tool  or  store  •  Compares  coverage  and  price  

•  Set  up  by  state  or  federal  government  

•  Voluntary  individuals  and  business  can  buy  insurance  inside  and  outside  the  Exchange  

•  Individuals  will  be  provided  tax  credits  only  inside  the  exchange.  

QuesBon  #1  

•  1.    Should  Missouri  establish  a  “state  based”  health  insurance  exchange  or  allow  the  federal  government  create  one  for  Missourians  to  use?  

Pro  and  Cons?  

Proponents  say  exchanges…  

– Pools  risks  inside  the  individual  and  small  group  markets  making  individual  ins.  more  like  group  ins.  

– Brings  down  cost  because  of  price  transparency,  compeBBon  and  choice  

Opponents  say  exchanges…    -­‐are  unnecessary    -­‐will  drive  up  costs  

QuesBon  #2  

•  2.  Should  Missouri  expand  its  Medicaid  program?  

What  is  Medicaid?  

•  President  Lyndon  Johnson  signed  Medicare  and  Medicaid  into  law  on  July  30,  1965,  in  Independence,  Missouri  in  a  ceremony  adended  by  former  President  Harry  Truman.    Medicaid  is  a  joint  federal-­‐state  program  offers  health  coverage  for  low-­‐income  people  of  specific  populaBons  –  children  up  to  age  19  –   parents  of  very  low  income  –   pregnant  women  

–   disabled  individuals  –  Long  term  care  for  seniors  age  65  of  low  income  and  few  assets  

 How  the  New  Medicaid  Program  would  change  MO  current  program.    

•  Moves  income  eligibility  from  17%  to  138%  FPL  for  families  with  dependent  children.  –  Family  of  3  at  17%  of  FPL  has  an  income  of  $3504  

–  Family  of  3  at  138%  FPL  has  an  income    of  $25,390  

•  For  the  first  Bme  will  include  adults  without  dependent  children.  –  Individual  at  138%  of  FPL  has  an  income  of  $15,415  

Coverage  and  Cost  

•  255,000  people  would  gain  coverage  

•  The  feds  pay  100%  of  newly  eligible  cover  for  the  first  3  years  calendar  years  starBng  2014-­‐2016  then  fed  share  phases  down  95%  in  2017,  94%  in  2018  and  90%  in  2019  and  beyond.  

State  Share  of  Cost  •  Urban  InsBtute  and  the  Department  of  Social  Services  did  

some  projecBons  in  2010  that  esBmated  the  cost  to  the  state  in  the  first  three  years  would  be  negligible  but  in  2017  the  cost  could  be  $50  million  rising  to  $189  million  in  2020  and  $253  million  in  2022.  

•  New  analysis  is  being  done  so  those  numbers  may  change.    

•  Some  folks  believe  a  “woodwork”  effect  could  cost  the  state  more.    No  woodwork  effect  factored  into  DSS  est.  

•  DSH  payment  begin  to  dramaBcally  reduce  in  2017,  many  argue  that  it  could  cause  major  disrupBon  in  our  hospital  system.  

EsBmates  #  of  People  Covered  

•  Health  Insurance  Exchange  305,000  

•  Medicaid  Expansion  255,000  

Thank  You  

•  Brian  Colby  

•  [email protected]