Posts Tagged ‘Massachusetts’

Latest Research

August 25, 2009

‘Consumer Protections’ Means More Mandates on the Way

Democrats have promised Americans an extensive health insurance benefit package—one as good as that held by members of Congress. They also want to move much of the regulatory power over health insurance markets from the state level, where it currently lies, to the national level.

To see what this would mean in practice, let’s turn to the states. Among the regulations states enact are benefit mandates, which outline the specific treatments that must be covered in all plans offered in a state.

As researchers at the Council for Affordable Health Insurance write:

“While mandates make health insurance more comprehensive, they also make it more expensive because mandates require insurers to pay for care consumers previously funded out of their own pockets. We estimate that mandated benefits currently increase the cost of basic health coverage from a little less than 20% to perhaps 50%…”

The “consumer protection” of a rich benefit package mandated nationwide would actually drive up insurance costs. Moreover, our political system creates pressures for politicians to enact mandates:

“Elected representatives find it difficult to oppose any legislation that promises enhanced care to potentially motivated voters. The sponsors of mandates know this fact of political life…By the late 1960s, state legislatures had passed only a handful of mandated benefits; today, the Council for Affordable Health Insurance (CAHI) has identified 2,133 mandated benefits and providers. And more are on their way.”

It is likely that the federal one-size-fits all benefit package, as proposed in the bills moving through Congress, will end up resembling a state like Massachusetts (with 52 total mandates) rather than one like Utah (with only 23 mandates). The Democrats’ reforms would mean more mandates and higher—not lower—health insurance costs.

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In the News

July 16, 2009

Tomorrow’s Health Care Headlines Today

A Boston Globe headline today reads Boston Medical sues state for funds. Replace “Boston Medical” with “Local Hospital X” and “state” with “federal government,” and you’ll have tomorrow’s headline. And it will dominate newspapers across the country, should Obamacare become law. First, though, some history.

When Massachusetts passed their health reform law in 2006, one of the major reform elements was an agreement between state and federal officials that would redirect federal Medicaid funds which were previously flowing to “safety net” institutions, like Boston Medical Center, for uncompensated care. They would instead use them to help the poor buy coverage. The thinking was (more…)

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In the News

June 30, 2009

Massachusetts Public “Pans” State Health Reform

According to the Boston Herald, only 26 percent of likely voters in Massachusetts think health care reform efforts in the state have been a success, with just 21 percent believing reform there has made health care more affordable. Citing a Rasmussen Reports poll of 500 likely voters in the state, the report notes only 10 percent of respondents “said the quality of health care is getting better under the reform law rules here.”

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