Ernie,

 

What we can hope for is a relative shift in compensation for family practice
doctors.  Lip service has been paid to this, but I am skeptical.

 

Connie's group is now a "medical home" provider.  Supposedly, that his a
good thing.

 

Chris

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ernest N. Prabhakar,
Ph.D.
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2012 11:21 AM
To: Centroids Discussions
Subject: [RC] Washington Stuck Fighting Wrong Health-Care Battle - Bloomberg

 

I don't know about the details, but I agree with the general principle.

 

Education as we know it is about to be massively disrupted in the next 3-5
years. Technology will play a role, but mostly as an enabler of a major
cultural shift in our understanding of and approach to education (especially
college).

 

After that, it will be health care's turn.  I'm telling my wife to start
thinking about what else she might like to do with her life later this
decade.  Chris, you should probably warn Connie at some point...

 

-- Ernie P.

 

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/washington-stuck-fighting-wrong-hea
lth-care-battle.html


Washington Stuck Fighting Wrong Health-Care Battle


While  <http://topics.bloomberg.com/washington/> Washington wonks continue
to bicker over health policy, positive change is occurring outside the
Beltway. 

Last week, the Altarum Institute, a research organization based in
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/ann-arbor/> Ann Arbor,
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/michigan/> Michigan,
<http://www.altarum.org/files/imce/CSHS-Spending-Brief_April%202012_041012.p
df> reported that the moderation in the growth of health-care costs we have
seen over the past few years is continuing: Total health spending rose by
less than 4 percent from February 2011 to February 2012. And it's
encouraging to see the progress that doctors, hospitals and other providers
are making to improve the value of care -- by cutting back on unnecessary
procedures, for example, expanding their use of
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/information-technology/> information
technology, and switching from fee-for- service to compensation schemes
aimed at maximizing the quality of treatment. 


About Peter R Orszag


Peter R. Orszag, vice chairman of global banking at Citigroup and an adjunct
senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, was President Obama's
director of the Office of Management and Budget.

 <about:/view/bios/peter-orszag/> More about Peter R Orszag 

 <about:/photo/view-columnist-peter-orszag-/144195.html> Enlarge image View
Columnist Peter Orszag 

Photographer: Ben Baker/Bloomberg 

Instead of examining these changes and finding ways to encourage them, the
Washington policy discussion continues to demonstrate its ability to, well,
it's not clear exactly what it does. The most senseless bloviating recently
came from Charles Blahous, a senior research fellow at
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/george-mason-university/> George Mason
University, in Arlington,  <http://topics.bloomberg.com/virginia/> Virginia,
and a former official in the George W. Bush White House. He
<http://mercatus.org/sites/default/files/publication/The-Fiscal-Consequences
-of-the-Affordable-Care-Act_1.pdf> claims to have shown that the 2010
health-care reform act will substantially increase the
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/budget-deficit/> budget deficit, despite
official estimates to the contrary. The Washington Post decided this
warranted prominent coverage. 

What Blahous actually did was play a trick. His analysis begins with the
observation that Medicare Part A, which covers hospital inpatient care, is
prohibited from making benefit payments in excess of incoming revenue once
its trust fund is exhausted. He therefore argues that the health reform act
is best compared to a world in which any benefit costs above incoming
revenue are simply cut off after the trust-fund exhaustion date. Then, he
argues that since the health-care reform act extends the life of the trust
fund, it allows more Medicare benefits to be paid in the future. Presto, the
law increases the deficit by raising Medicare benefits. 


Double Standard 


Yet Blahous only partially adopts his own novel approach. When discussing
the nation's fiscal outlook, he writes of the "federal government's
untenable long-term fiscal outlook under current law." But the long-term
deficit projections are so dire primarily because we assume that benefits
will continue to be paid in full even after the Medicare and Social Security
trust funds are exhausted. If no benefits beyond incoming revenue can be
paid after the trust funds are exhausted, then the fiscal outlook really
isn't untenable. 

You  <http://crfb.org/blogs/affordable-care-act-and-hi-trust-fund> can't
adopt one perspective to argue we have a massive long-term deficit and then
another to argue that the health bill expands the deficit. 

While we're at it, since Blahous is enthralled with basing his deficit
projections on such a strict interpretation of the law, he is being far too
modest. The government is not legally allowed to issue any debt above the
statutory limit, so Blahous should have assumed the deficit would disappear
when we reach that limit at or around the beginning of next year. 

(In case there's any doubt about his disingenuousness, Blahous subsequently
<http://www.forbes.com/sites/aroy/2012/04/11/why-obamacare-expands-the-defic
it-charles-blahous-rebuts-his-critics/> defended his article by claiming
that it was subject to a "double-blind peer review process, which means that
I did not know who was reviewing the paper, and the reviewers did not know
who had written it." Yet the text of the paper itself, at footnote 26,
states that the author is one of the public Medicare trustees. There are
only two, and as any competent reviewer would have known, the probability
that the other trustee,  <http://topics.bloomberg.com/robert-reischauer/>
Robert Reischauer, would have written it is effectively zero.) 

Another study receiving some recent attention is a much more serious one --
which is why it didn't get a whole lot of attention. Joseph Doyle, a
professor of economics at the
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/massachusetts-institute-of-technology/>
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his co-authors examined whether
high-cost hospitals in  <http://topics.bloomberg.com/new-york/> New York
deliver better care than low-cost ones do. The design of
<http://www.nber.org/papers/w17936.pdf> their study is clever, and the
authors conclude that the higher-cost hospitals have lower mortality rates.
This challenges an array of evidence, most associated with researchers at
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/dartmouth-college/> Dartmouth College,
suggesting that higher costs don't mean higher quality. 

The Doyle study, though, included emergency patients only, and not all of
them. As a result, it examined only about 5 percent of the admissions (who
account for less than 10 percent of total costs) at the relevant hospitals.
Furthermore, as the authors note, even for that 5 percent of admissions,
there appeared to be no additional benefit to higher spending at the
hospitals whose costs were in the top 15 percent of all hospitals in their
sample. The conclusion from the Doyle study is thus not, as some in
Washington have argued, that there are no opportunities for lowering costs
without impairing quality. It's only that for certain types of emergency
care, higher-cost hospitals seem to deliver better results -- and only up to
a point. 

This brings us back to the progress being made beyond the Beltway toward a
better combination of cost and quality in health care. Consistent with other
evidence that points to a deceleration in cost pressures is a Congressional
Budget Office
<http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/2012_03%20MBR.p
df> report earlier this month showing that Medicare spending has risen less
than 3 percent over the past year. 

In a future column, I will explore the debate over whether this slowdown is
purely temporary. On the one hand, the Great Recession has restrained
health-care spending. On the other, many changes in health-care delivery --
for instance, the recent decision by nine physician groups to eliminate 45
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/04/health/doctor-panels-urge-fewer-routine-t
ests.html> unnecessary tests and procedures -- suggests the slowdown is at
least partly structural. The question then becomes how to continue it.
That's what Washington should be debating. 

( <http://topics.bloomberg.com/peter-orszag/> Peter Orszag is vice chairman
of global banking at Citigroup Inc. and a former director of the Office of
Management and Budget in the Obama administration. The opinions expressed
are his own.) 

Read more opinion online from  <http://www.bloomberg.com/view/> Bloomberg
View. 

Today's highlights: the View editors on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/let-the-irs-do-your-taxes-really.h
tml?cmpid=BVrelated> simplifying your taxes and Obama's
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/scapegoating-oil-speculators-won-t
-ease-pain-at-the-pump.html?cmpid=BVrelated> oil-speculation plan;
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/margaret-carlson/> Margaret Carlson on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/the-war-on-women-takes-a-turn-for-
the-worse.html?cmpid=BVrelated> Ann Romney's choices; Clive Crook on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/instagram-deal-reflects-wrenching-
structural-change.html?cmpid=BVrelated> economic fairness; William Pesek on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/billionaires-make-killing-amid-chi
na-murder-tale.html?cmpid=BVrelated> China's power shift;
<http://topics.bloomberg.com/roger-lowenstein/> Roger Lowenstein on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/derivatives-lobby-has-u-s-regulato
rs-on-the-run.html?cmpid=BVrelated> dodging Dodd- Frank; Ana Palacio on
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-17/spain-s-wilting-economy-still-held
-in-franco-s-grip.html?cmpid=BVrelated> Spain's outdated labor laws. 

To contact the writer of this article: Peter Orszag at
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] 

To contact the editor responsible for this article: Mary Duenwald at
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] 

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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