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The Affordable Care Act: Its Impact on Cancer Care in Maine

The Affordable Care Act: Its Impact on Cancer Care in Maine. Trish Riley, Senior Fellow Muskie School of Public Service, USM. Goal?. Access to Affordable, Quality health care for everyone in the United States. The Long National Debate. Everybody was self pay–INDIVIDUAL CHOICE

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The Affordable Care Act: Its Impact on Cancer Care in Maine

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  1. The Affordable Care Act: Its Impact on Cancer Care in Maine Trish Riley, Senior Fellow Muskie School of Public Service, USM

  2. Goal? Access to Affordable, Quality health care for everyone in the United States

  3. The Long National Debate • Everybody was self pay–INDIVIDUAL CHOICE • 1912–Teddy Roosevelt and the Bull Moose Party –Universal coverage for all–GOVERNMENT • 1929–Baylor Hospital pre-paid health plan for teachers–(.50/mo for 21 hospital days)–PRIVATE SECTOR

  4. Mixed Model–Private and Public Government–Wage and price controls–WWII Employers–Offer health insurance instead – Tax deductibility post-war

  5. The Debate Continues for the Next 60 Years… Truman (1940’s-post war)–Universal coverage FAILED Johnson (1965)–Medicare and Medicaid Incremental Nixon (1970s)–Employer mandate FAILED

  6. The Debate Continues… Clinton: Universal coverage plan/managed competition –Republican alternative–Individual mandate –Congress rejects; big players (AMA, HIAA) oppose Congress: State Children’s Health Insurance Bush: Medicare Pt D., but with a donut hole

  7. After 100 Years of Trying… Where did our pre-ACA system get us? ◦ Patchwork quilt ◦ Pay twice what other developed nations do ◦ We don’t get better health ◦ We leave 47 million uninsured

  8. Health Spending per capita, 2009adjusted for differences in cost of living The Commonwealth Fund

  9. Rates of Uninsured AK NH WA VT ME MT ND MN OR NY ID WI MA SD RI WY MI CT PA IA NJ OH NE NV DE IN IL MD UT WV VA CO DC CA KS MO KY NC TN SC OK AZ AR NM GA AL HI MS LA TX FL 5%–<11% uninsured 11%–<16% uninsured 16%–<20% uninsured 20%–25% uninsured Source: KFF, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2010. United States Census Bureau, Sept. 2011. Percentages are two-year averages, 2009–2010; national average is 16.2% over the two-year period.

  10. Health Insurance Coverage ofthe Nonelderly Population, 2010 Private Non-group 5.5% 266.0 Million SOURCE: KCMU/Urban Institute analysis of 2011 ASEC Supplement to the CPS.

  11. Over $750 Billion Wasted Annually In Billions of U.S. Dollars, Source: IoM The Healthcare Imperative: Lowering Costs and Improving Outcomes (2011) Riley, USM

  12. US Spends More than Peer Nations • More hospital care • Higher administrative costs/complexity • Higher prices • Higher staff ratios • More surgery/procedures–no better outcomes (more MRIs, CT) McKinsey Global Institute, 2011

  13. IOM: “Shorter Lives, Poorer Health” US vs. Other Industrialized Countries: • Lower life expectancy • Higher infant mortality/low birth weight • More disability • More obesity, heart disease, COPD • EVEN WHEN CONTROLLING FOR RACIAL AND ETNIC DISPARITIES

  14. What about Cancer Care? • US spends more on cancer care than European countries and US does better re: longevity • Especially breast and prostate • BUT do we diagnose earlier? • Is longevity the same as quality of life? • What is the metric here?

  15. ACA–The Law of the Land • Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act • Or ObamaCare • Signed into law by President Obama, March 23, 2010 • Supreme Court Challenge, June 27, 2012 • Full Implementation in 2014

  16. How Does ACA address: The Triple Aim • Access • Cost • Quality Reforms phased in

  17. Overview • All must be covered–but subsidies to help –Medicaid to 133%/simplified until SCOTUS • 24 states still say NO, including Maine – Tax credits 133-400% fpl • New marketplaces for individuals and small business–Travelocity/state based • Employers provide or pay penalty if EEs get subsidy • New investment in cost and quality reforms

  18. Access • Maintains employer coverage – Penalties if employees access subsidies • Small business exempted • Grandfathers plans • Individual mandate • Young adults–parental coverage to 26 • Medicaid expansions to 133% FPL (optional) • Tax credits (subsidies) to 400% FPL

  19. Access (cont’d) • Investments in health centers/workforce • Insurance reforms • Cannot be denied coverage • No pre-ex/recissions • No annual or lifetime limits • Essential health benefits/qualified health plans • Limits coverage costs based on income • Cannot exceed 9.5% income • OOP limits: $6,350 ind/12,700 family

  20. Medicaid vs. Subsidized Exchange Coverage: Differences in Eligibility and Benefits Kaiser Family Foundation

  21. How Subsidies Work Older couple in Thomaston ME with an Income of $30,000 (193% FPL) Premium : $14,325/yr Tax Credit: $12,526 THEY PAY: $ 1,800/yr OOP limit: $4,500

  22. Costs/Affordability • Coverage reduces hidden tax of charity care • 100% coverage for prevention/immunization • USPSTF A and B • Breast, cervical, colorectal screening • Insurance Exchanges–States – Choice of plans–bronze, silver, gold, platinum/transparency • Members of Congress • Small business tax credits

  23. Costs (cont’d) • Pt. D–Donut hole • Payment Reform Demos • CMS Center for Innovation • Insurance reforms • Rate review • Medical loss ratio–must spend at least 80% on care • Community rating–sick won’t pay more

  24. Quality • National Quality Strategy • Prevention and Public Health Trust Fund • Non-payment for hospital acquired infections and re-admissions • Demos to promote quality – Team approaches • Health homes, etc.

  25. Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute • Authorized thru 2019 @ $3.5 Billion • Funded by general fund and fee on all insurers • “To provide info on best available evidence to help patients and providers make more informed decisions…and • Give patients better understanding of prevention, treatment and care options and science that supports them • www.pcori.org

  26. From “Death Panels” to Palliative Care • Penalties for re-admission within 30 days • ACOs and Medical homes Issues: ◦ Who manages cancer care in a medical home? ◦ How are prevention and screening assured? ◦ Will there be registries, outreach, reminders? ◦ Does continuity of care include palliative, end-of- life and survivorship? ◦ Will NCCN guidelines be used?

  27. Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC • Serves three health systems in SE Pennsylvania • First oncology practice to receive NCQA Level III Physician Practice Connections–PCMH designation–April 2010 • Key characteristics: • Partnership patient/practice – Oncology manages cancer care and links with PCP • Specialized, improved EMR–measure quality/improve outcome

  28. Comprehensive Reform • Requires new ways of doing business • Payment and delivery reform–Pay for outcomes, not volume of procedures–Patient centered • Are ACOs, medical homes, team practice going to work? How will we know? Data?

  29. Hope for Cancer Care • Prevention focus • No more job lock–everybody can get health coverage and sick don’t pay more • Affordability–subsidies/Medicaid (except here) • Coverage for clinical trials • More Rx coverage (Medicare Donut hole) • Payment reform and innovation • Outcomes research/patient engagement

  30. Health Reform is a Journey, Not a Destination • Not universal–Still leaves many uninsured • Work in progress • But remember: It’s taken 100 years to get here

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