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Outline. Healthcare in America
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1. South Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce Healthcare Taskforce Healthcare Reform:
A Proposal from the
Business Community
2. Outline Healthcare in America – a Broken System
Why should business be involved in this discussion?
Why should the So Metro Chamber be involved?
Background on the Chamber Task Force
Healthcare Reform in Colorado – the 208 Commission
The South Metro Denver Chamber Taskforce Proposal
Next Steps
Questions/Discussion 2
3. We need to “Kill the Myth” that the US has the best healthcare system in the World* Quality: “We have Islands of Excellence in the midst of a Sea of Mediocrity.” The US is:
29th in Infant Mortality
24th in Women’s Health
31st in Life Expectancy
37th in Outcomes (Below Costa Rica but ahead of Slovenia)
If the US were 37th in Olympic Medal Count, how long would the American public tolerate that?
Cost: GM spends more on healthcare than on steel
Starbucks spends more on healthcare than on coffee
– *Tom Daschle, US Health/Human Services Secretary Designee, Speaking at the Colorado Healthcare Summit, 12/5/2008
4. Some Alarming Metrics 47 million un-/underinsured in the US
Estimated 770,000 in Colorado
30˘ – 40 ˘ of every healthcare dollar has nothing to do with actual healthcare
1 out of every 7 employed people in the US economy works in some aspect of healthcare
1.7 million jobs have been added in healthcare since 2001, yet there are shortages of physicians, nurses and others who actually “deliver” healthcare 4
5. US Healthcare got a “D” grade from the Commonwealth Fund in 2006 Based on 37 measures including outcomes, quality of care, access to care and efficiency, etc.
Relative to other nations, the report says the US has:
Among the lowest life expectancy at both birth and age 60
An infant mortality rate of 7 per 1,000, versus 2.7 in top 3
Only 49% of adults receiving recommended preventive and screening tests for their age and sex
Administrative costs 3X higher than other countries
GDP costs of ~16% versus ~10% in other countries
Colorado ranks 22nd in this report (~average) 5
6. The results in Colorado mirror the nation: Colorado Health Foundation “Health Report Card” (Denver Post, 10-18-07) gave the following grades:
A minus - Senior Citizens
B - Adults
B minus - Colorado Residents for obesity, smoking and high blood pressure.
B minus - Adolescents
C minus- Infants and Children for health insurance coverage, access to medical care, and vaccinations
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7. US Healthcare First, but not Best 7 US health expenditures as % of gross domestic product exceeds every other industrialized country.
We in America collectively spend more on health care than Canada or the U.K. spends on all their goods and services combined.
According to Organisation for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD):
Average %GDP for industrialized countries is 9% (vs. our 16%).
Switzerland, Germany, and France follow the US in % GDP, with 11.6%, 10.9%, and 10.5%, respectively
Per capita (2004) was $6,100, more than twice the average OECD countries’ average of $2,550
Luxembourg was second after the U.S., with per capital spending of $5089, followed by Switzerland and Norway, with spending of about $4,000 per person.
Per capita for 2006 projected to be $7,129 per person (OECD Health Data 2006).
US spends over half (53%) of what the entire world spends on health care
U.S. is the only industrialized country, except for Mexico and Turkey, without some form of universal heath care
So, we’re getting the best clinical outcomes for all this spending, right?US health expenditures as % of gross domestic product exceeds every other industrialized country.
We in America collectively spend more on health care than Canada or the U.K. spends on all their goods and services combined.
According to Organisation for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD):
Average %GDP for industrialized countries is 9% (vs. our 16%).
Switzerland, Germany, and France follow the US in % GDP, with 11.6%, 10.9%, and 10.5%, respectively
Per capita (2004) was $6,100, more than twice the average OECD countries’ average of $2,550
Luxembourg was second after the U.S., with per capital spending of $5089, followed by Switzerland and Norway, with spending of about $4,000 per person.
Per capita for 2006 projected to be $7,129 per person (OECD Health Data 2006).
US spends over half (53%) of what the entire world spends on health care
U.S. is the only industrialized country, except for Mexico and Turkey, without some form of universal heath care
So, we’re getting the best clinical outcomes for all this spending, right?
8. Cost Trend: a Personal View 8 It’s not 1 year but the cumulative effectIt’s not 1 year but the cumulative effect
9. Cost Spend 9
10. How did business get involved? Healthcare provided by employers started out as:
Temporary response to post-WWII wage/price controls
Optional, part of an overall compensation package
Was considered a “nice-to-have,” a benefit
Employees used to say, “You can’t eat (or pay the rent) with healthcare benefits”
But now employer-sponsored healthcare has become:
Essentially universal (has led to portability issues)
A right, an entitlement, a given, an automatic
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11. Business is significantly and adversely impacted: Costs are growing at 2-5x the inflation rate
>16% of the GDP and accelerating
Business viability and competitiveness suffering
Costing employers more in both dollars and time
Employees are frustrated with their employers’ plans
Employers and managers are intimately involved with healthcare discussions and decisions
All governmental budgets severely strained, looking to businesses to pick up even more of the tab
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12. Business must be involved in solutions The major stakeholders in healthcare are:
Consumers (employees, dependents, unions)
Providers (e.g., physicians, hospitals, pharma, diagnostics, etc.)
Payers (insurance companies, state/federal government agencies)
Employers
In today’s healthcare reform discussions, the first 3 stakeholders are typically involved, but not the 4th
Most reform plans are PFBO – Paid For By Others
The “Others” are typically employers
If you’re not “at the table” then you are probably “on the menu” 12
13. Why this task force? The South Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce represents a cross-section of business and consumers
Small/medium business owners
Large employers
Insurance companies and insurance plans
Providers – hospitals, physicians, surgeons
Government (through elected officials, appointees)
Businesses involved directly or indirectly with healthcare
The Chamber has a history of getting things done
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14. The South Metro Chamber Task Force Started ~4 years ago
Upwards of 100 people involved at various times
Viewpoints covered the entire ideological/experience spectrum
The task force met at least monthly for over 4 years
In early 2007 the 208 Commission provided an audience and a target for our efforts
We have continued our efforts independently from the 208 Commission process 14
15. Business Priorities for Health Care Reform – Cost, Quality, Access, Individual Responsibility Access for All Colorado Residents
Individuals must be accountable for Lifestyle Choices, Treatment and Cost Decisions
Employers should be separated from making Health Care Decisions for employees
Increased access and better quality can be achieved with dollars already being spent
Free Market Dynamics are the best means to reduce Cost and increase Quality –
Transparency and Portability
Appropriate Regulatory oversight of Quality
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16. Elements of Reform 16
17. The 208 Commission – an example of the Health Care Reform discussion Chartered by legislature, approved by two administrations
Bi-Partisan group of 27 commissioners
Impressive credentials/healthcare backgrounds
Very limited involvement from business, especially SMB
31 plans received and reviewed
11 semi-finalists (including the South Metro Chamber’s)
4 Finalists Selected and modeled for cost; none of them were from business sector
5th, Hybrid Proposal was developed Page 17
18. Common elements of 208 Commission “finalist” plans All plans were heavily PFBO – Paid For By Others
They focused primarily on payment, not on costs
Focus is on access for the un-/under-insured (do they care?)
Funded by tax increases and/or employer mandates
Cost control through mandate only
No Free-Market Forces or Competitive Factors
Essentially NO individual responsibility/payment factors
Limited attention to Quality and Transparency
Limited focus on lifestyle and preventative issues Page 18
19. Many elements are not consistent with Business’ Priorities Employer mandates and limiting available plans frustrates Free Market Dynamics
No direct relationship between health care costs and personal lifestyle decisions
Little substance or funding mechanism for preventative and wellness initiatives
No effective mechanisms for cost containment and risk sharing of catastrophic care
Cost and Quality addressed through mandate, not by the market 19
20. South Metro Denver Proposal The current system is fundamentally flawed and needs significant reform at all levels
Merely “tweaking” the existing system will lead to more of the same
There must be appropriate attention to:
Cost
Quality
Access
Outcomes
Individual choice and accountability
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21. Mike Leavitt, Former Secretary of Health and Human Services: “We need a uniquely American approach to health care, based on a free, competitive marketplace …to make private health insurance affordable for all Americans.”
“…we need to empower the states to organize the marketplace… states are much more fiscally responsible than the federal government.”
- Editorial, “Reforming health care,” The Washington Times, July 9, 2007. 21
22. Cost – Business Perspective There is already plenty of money in the system
By contrast, with the PFBO approach:
Three of the final 208 Commission plans had costs ranging from +$595 Million to +$1.2 Billion
A single-payer proposal claimed no cost increase, but required a 6% employer tax
The Obama plan would cost from $150 Billion to $250 Billion per year 22
23. Business Priorities for Health Care Reform – Access for all Colorado residents
Individuals must be accountable for Lifestyle Choices, Treatment and Cost Decisions
Employers should be separated from making Health Care Decisions for employees
Free Market Dynamics are the best means to reduce Cost and increase Quality –
Transparency
Appropriate Regulatory oversight of Quality
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24. Our proposal accomplishes the following: Incorporates six guiding principles
Improves access for all Colorado Residents
Increases use of health information technology
Improves care coordination
Increases transparency (both cost and quality)
Reduces administrative costs
Requires Individual Accountability
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25. Six Guiding Principles for an Effective Healthcare System: These guiding principles form a foundational framework against which any potential reform plan should be assessed:
The fundamental player in healthcare transactions is the individual. He/she needs to be responsible for healthcare outcomes.
The fundamental relationship is between the individual and his/her healthcare provider:
Anything that facilitates or streamlines this relationship is to be encouraged ?
Anything that frustrates or hinders this relationship is to be discouraged ?
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26. Six Guiding Principles, cont. Healthcare services should be provided to an individual with limited and efficient outside intervention, and with maximum transparency
The goal should be increased value for all participants.
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27. Six Guiding Principles, cont. There should be no automatic connection between healthcare and employment.
Movement towards an individual-based system will reduce dependency on third parties such as employers, government and payers, and increase personal responsibility for costs and portability of insurance. 27
28. Cost/Value Initiatives Inherent inefficiencies (confusing exchanges of information between/across episodes of care)
Adopt more information technology and automation
Evidence-based medicine and quality measures
Set up, promote, and utilize data clearinghouses that aggregate treatment, diagnostic data, and outcome data
The consumer does not manage the process
Promote the creation and proliferation of processes, institutions and entities that help healthcare consumers evaluate quality measure systems and transparency
There is currently no incentive for healthy lifestyle/ choices
Provide incentives for preventative/good health initiatives and lifestyles 28
29. Payment Initiatives 3 Tier payment system
Catastrophic: conditions with high costs (over ~100K). Funded by re-insurance pool from maintenance policy premiums.
Middle Tier: Accidents/illnesses without a major cost. Funded by individual/personal policies (indemnity coverage).
Preventative: promotes good health, treats conditions at an early stage prior to development of costlier problems. Funded by subset of maintenance policy premiums.
Cherry-picking, exclusion/up-rating for hereditary and pre-existing conditions not allowed, but lifestyle choices may affect cost 29
30. Benefits of this Proposal Comprehensive – addresses both cost and payment/access side of equation
Decrease costs, increase quality, and provide better value
Unleash power and benefits of competition
Bring consumer into the picture – front and center
Improve health of consumers
Reduce strain on business governmental budgets
Improve physician & patient relationship
New era of transparency and information sharing
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31. Role of Business The business community needs to get and stay involved in healthcare reform
We are not proposing removing businesses entirely, just reducing the automatic/mandated role
Businesses should strive to stay competitive in the labor pool, by competitive/free-market principles, not by government fiat
Other stakeholders – individuals, providers, insurance – are not excluded; in fact their roles are clarified and more focused
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32. Next Steps Participate in, rather than “kill” reform
Get involved
Engage Business Groups across the state
Use connections to lobby the Legislature and other regulatory processes
Be “at the table” (to avoid being “on the menu”)
Support turning this proposal into Legislation 32
33. Presentations/PR/Exposure by Healthcare Task Force 208 Commission Proposal Submission
Republican Business Coalition
Littleton Optimists Club
Applewood Business Association
NFIB State Leadership Board
CMS Annual Retreat, Vail
Medical Marketing Group
Denver Business Journal
KNUS Radio
Chamber Leadership Retreat
Chamber Board of Directors
Chamber Expo Seminar
Chamber membership meetings
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34. Key Contributors to Final Proposal Paul Archer, business owner, current task force co-chair
Leo Tokar, VP Kaiser Permanente, current task force co-chair
David Crane, CEO of a Denver-area hospital, former task force chair
David Laverty, Business Consultant, former task force chair
Neil Ayervais, healthcare attorney
Penny Baldwin, insurance expert/patient advocate
Jeff Burns, business owner
Marion Jenkins, business owner, healthcare focus
Allan Kortz, MD, former surgeon, healthcare consultant
Julie Taylor, COO of a Denver-area hospital
Brian Vogt, Former SMDCC President, State Cabinet Officer
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35. Many other taskforce contributors 35
36. Questions/Further Discussion Paul Archer, Automated Business Products
parcher@abpcopy.com 720.283.6771
Leo Tokar, Kaiser Permanente
Leo.tokar@kp.org 303-344-7242
Neil Ayervais, Alperstein and Covell
nea@alpersteincovell.com 303.894.8191
Jeff Burns, Computer Skills Group
jeffburns@csg-colorado.com 303.794.0694
Marion Jenkins, QSE Technologies
marion.jenkins@qsetech.com 303.283.8400 36