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To Fix Obamacare The GOP Needs To Tackle This Flaw In The Health-Care System


               
2016 Dec 22, 6:25am   630 views  7 comments

by ohomen171   follow (2)  

HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CARE HOSPITALS PHARMA EQUIPMENT & SERVICES HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH CARE IT MODERN MEDICINE
To fix Obamacare, the GOP needs to tackle this major flaw in the health-care system
Rita Numerof, PhD, president of Numerof & Associates
Tuesday, 20 Dec 2016 | 12:37 PM ET
CNBC.com
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Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-WI) answers questions during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol November 15, 2016 in Washington. Also pictured are (L-R) House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), Republican Conference Chairman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), and House Republican Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA).
Win McNamee | Getty Images
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-WI) answers questions during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol November 15, 2016 in Washington. Also pictured are (L-R) House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), Republican Conference Chairman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), and House Republican Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA).
As Republicans in Washington get set to reshape national health-care policy, it is critical that the surrounding debate distinguishes between two related but distinct issues: access to coverage and access to care.

In other areas of policy, we understand this distinction. We know that the issues of homelessness and affordable housing are linked, but not the same. Solutions for one are not automatically fixes for the other. We see the same thing with other basic health issues like food security and nutrition.

Only in health care do we consider the decades-long challenge of delivering high-quality and cost-efficient care "solved" once everyone nominally has access to some sort of insurance.

But real health-care reform is not just about coverage. Getting people into exchange plans they can barely afford, with heavy (and increasing) deductibles and taxpayer-funded subsidies, is a "homeless shelter" fix. It's better than being on the streets — for sure — but a homeless shelter isn't a home any more than a high-deductible "bronze" plan is a real health-care solution for a family that can barely afford to pay the rest of its bills.

If we want to fix this system, it's time to get serious about replacing fee-for-service provider reimbursement with approaches that link costs to outcomes, like bundled payments and population health.
Health care in a post-Obamacare world: Centene CEO Health care in a post-Obamacare world: Centene CEO
Thursday, 15 Dec 2016 | 7:15 AM ET | 04:50
"If we are serious about reform, we need to move beyond the current obsession with coverage to a real debate about accountability, transparency, cost and quality."
The Obama administration has pushed forward on several value-based care initiatives, but one of the most striking success stories we've had occurred under the previous Republican administration.

In 2008, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS) announced it would no longer pay for so-called never events — preventable incidents like hospital falls or objects left in patients after surgery that should never happen in modern health-care delivery organizations.

This first meaningful connection between payment and outcomes led directly to a 17 percent decline in hospital-acquired conditions from 2012 to 2013. Notably, it took financial incentives/consequences before this happened.

Unfortunately, there are worrisome signs that the incoming Trump administration is less committed to the idea of value-based care. It will be important to differentiate between the baby (payment reform) and the bathwater (onerous regulations and reporting requirements) if we're ever going to get to true value in health care.

A second key goal for reform is more in keeping with Trump's campaign messages. Unwinding the existing incentives for consolidation would help preserve the competitiveness of many local markets, and thereby protect working-class families. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) established a bureaucratic labyrinth of new organizational structures, regulations and incentives.

Rather than focusing on the capabilities and culture needed to move toward better outcomes at lower cost, providers and payers have been compelled to invest in new staff and technologies to comply with all these new regulations.

On the provider side, this effort spawned a flood of consolidation, with health-care delivery systems buying or affiliating with other systems, and physicians seeking refuge in employment from proliferating bureaucracy. A grave danger we face as a nation is that all these systems become too big to fail — and, more importantly, too big to care.

Finally, it is past time to require transparency of cost and outcomes, so consumers can make informed choices about their care. Having awareness that not every hospital is performing equally well allows consumers to make judicious decisions, an important first step toward a true market-based health-care system.

Health care is an issue that affects all Americans. It costs too much, it is piecemeal, there is little accountability for outcomes, and it is not consumer-centered.

In virtually every other industry, consumer demand drives service providers and product manufacturers to improve quality and compete on price. In contrast, the approach in health care has always been to try to reduce costs by manipulating organizational structures — as with HMOs or Accountable Care Organizations — while leaving in place the original sin of fee-for-service provider reimbursement.

This will always incentivize volume-driven care decisions, not a focus on outcomes.

If we are serious about reform, we need to move beyond the current obsession with coverage to a real debate about accountability, transparency, cost and quality.

Commentary by Rita Numerof, PhD, president of Numerof & Associates, a firm that helps businesses across the health-care sector define and implement strategies for winning in dynamic markets.

For more insight from CNBC contributors, follow @CNBCopinion on Twitter.

Comments 1 - 7 of 7        Search these comments

1   Y   2016 Dec 22, 6:32am  

So you want the GOP to risk CTE and repair the HCS to treat it?
I seeeeee.....

ohomen171 says

To Fix Obamacare The GOP Needs To Tackle This Flaw In THe Health-Care System

2   HEY YOU   2016 Dec 22, 6:44am  

Republicans need to Repeal ACA,stop all govt. subsidies for healthcare, remove all regulations from the healthcare system as Republicans voters deserve.
They don't need any assistance because they are economic geniuses.
But those Rs that can't pay cash let them DIE!
That will MAGA!

3   MMR   2016 Dec 22, 6:48am  

ohomen171 says

Only in health care do we consider the decades-long challenge of delivering high-quality and cost-efficient care "solved" once everyone nominally has access to some sort of insurance.

gotta say, I don't think that many people think that at all, especially given the number of people who have managed not to get insurance even after ACA was implemented

4   MMR   2016 Dec 22, 6:51am  

ohomen171 says

physicians seeking refuge in employment from proliferating bureaucracy

this is a problem that contributes to a lack of physician autonomy.HEY YOU says

But those Rs that can't pay cash let them DIE!

you say this a lot, but what is wrong with having price transparency and possibly, discounts for those who can pay in cash?

5   MMR   2016 Dec 22, 6:53am  

ohomen171 says

there is little accountability for outcomes

hence, the advent of ACO; reimbursements are outcome-based, the flaw in the system here is that, it might look attractive to either fire non-compliant patients or simply not take them on.

6   MMR   2016 Dec 22, 6:54am  

ohomen171 says

while leaving in place the original sin of fee-for-service provider reimbursement.

the biggest sin is not knowing what those fees are upfront.

7   MMR   2016 Dec 22, 6:59am  

ohomen171 says

Rather than focusing on the capabilities and culture needed to move toward better outcomes at lower cost, providers and payers have been compelled to invest in new staff and technologies to comply with all these new regulations

lower cost and time; lot of time goes into documentation and takes away from time that could be devoted to patient care;

wonder why health insurance has to be tied primarily to employment and why the costs of acquiring insurance can't go down by allowing insurers to compete across state lines.

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