Yes, this article may bore you to tears, but it's worth it if you're a
concerned US tax payer.  Note that one of the authors, Regina
Herzlinger, is considered the Queen of CDHC.
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They'd Sooner Fix Medicaid
By TOM COBURN and REGINA HERZLINGER
May 18, 2006; Page A15

OKLAHOMA CITY -- The state Legislature here is working to finalize an
agreement for Medicaid reform legislation creating personal health
accounts (PHAs) for Medicaid enrollees. This comes hard on the heels
of similar innovations in South Carolina and Florida. Reform is in the
air -- much the way it was when Wisconsin revolutionized its welfare
system in the early 1990s, forerunning a stunning national success.
Are we on the verge of consumer revolution in health care?

It is of course too soon to tell, but the Oklahoma case study is
auspicious. The state's antiquated Medicaid bureaucracy has fostered,
by turns, a lack of patient choice, provider dissatisfaction, a 9.5%
payment error rate, and an escalating price tag of some $3.5 billion.
Against these discouraging trends, state leaders spent six months last
year formulating stopgap measures with state agencies, policy
innovators, providers and beneficiaries.

Instead of assuming the indigent are incapable of decision-making,
Oklahoma legislators proposed that Medicaid beneficiaries be given a
risk-adjusted allowance to purchase private health insurance. A PHA
would be established for annual out-of-pocket expenses without a "use
it or lose it" penalty -- that is, the unspent balance could be used
for future health-care needs. They state would not mandate a
homogenous set of benefits; instead, it would provide financial
assistance and patient counseling.

The reform passed the Oklahoma State House in March and recently won
Oklahoma State Senate approval. The bill's sponsors, Republican Rep.
Kris Steele, and Democratic Sen. Tom Adelson, are working to craft a
durable bill to send to the governor by the end of this year.

Oklahoma is simply coming to grips with reality -- Medicaid needs
fundamental change. Although the program subsidizes care for 52
million low-income people, Medicaid's price tag threatens the
financial stability of many states. South Carolina's expenses, for
instance, have virtually doubled in the past decade, and may consume
nearly one-fourth of the state's budget in 2010. Nationwide, Medicaid
spending grew 9.1% in 2004 alone, and is projected to be at nearly
half a trillion dollars in less than a decade. Fiscally conscious
governors and state legislatures have traditionally controlled
Medicaid expenses through reductions in enrollment, benefits and
provider reimbursement. Tennessee governor Phil Bredesen, for
instance, culled 190,000 from the Medicaid rolls.

But Oklahoma, South Carolina and Florida have embarked on a path that
is at once less draconian and yet more radical. All three states have
taken the step of permitting Medicaid enrollees to choose health
services and providers for themselves. South Carolina, for example,
puts a set amount every year into each enrollee's PHA, to be spent as
he or she sees fit. The benefits of this simple but revolutionary
system will be enormous: Health costs remain low, government outlays
stable and state finances healthy. Private accounts will introduce
market incentives into the Medicaid system, lightening obligations all
around.

Medicaid enrollees can shop for care and increase their chances of
receiving the care they need. (Not surprisingly, current Medicaid
enrollees have more unmet needs than similar adults with private
health insurance.) Health-care providers, compelled to compete for
Medicaid customers will likely offer more consumer-oriented services
at competitive costs.

Critics of Medicaid choice argue that such plans have several
intrinsic flaws. Some view the plan as wasteful, citing Medicaid's
already low per-patient cost. But these "low costs" come at the
participants' expense. Physicians, scared off by the drastically low
level of state reimbursement for Medicaid providers, refuse to take
them on as clients. In South Carolina, 30% of physicians refuse to
accept any new Medicaid enrollees. With the new regime, physicians
will have increased freedom to price competitively.

What about the common charges that Medicaid choice works only in
states with numerous managed care providers? One need only look at
Georgia and Ohio to refute this claim. Both states drew enthusiastic
crowds of providers after they enacted Medicaid choice plans,
including Goliaths of the business like Aetna, United Health and
Anthem.

But these are side issues for the real opponents of Medicaid choice.
They inevitably trot out a familiar, patronizing argument. Medicaid
enrollees, they claim, are either not educated enough to be trusted
with their own health, or lack access to necessary sources of
information. Yet patients make intelligent decisions -- when we let
them do it. For instance, disabled people in government-run "cash and
counseling" programs -- monthly, need-based health allowances, spent
at the discretion of the participants -- consistently receive better
care than those who lack discretion.

Even in the private sector, evidence favors consumer-driven plans.
Definity Health and Cigna, both providers of consumer-driven insurance
policies, have actually documented a reduction in flare-ups among
their diabetic and asthmatic enrollees due to increased testing and
drug compliance. McKinsey & Co. found that members of consumer-driven
health plans were more likely to follow the complicated treatment
routines necessary to hold chronic diseases at bay.

Conventional wisdom is usually posed against reform; and it seems even
less trustworthy regarding Medicaid. We now stand at a crossroads,
similar to the one 15 years ago regarding welfare. Strong-arming
enrollees and providers with rationing tactics is not the only way,
and surely not the best way, to control Medicaid costs.

We can move beyond the "Scrooge" option. Letting consumers drive the
system is better both for the health of patients and the solvency of
their home states. Oklahoma is the latest example of an encouraging
trend.

Dr. Coburn is a Republican senator from Oklahoma. Ms. Herzlinger is
the Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business Administration at the
Harvard Business School and a senior fellow at the Manhattan
Institute.

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