Governor favors single-payer health care
By Kristen Consillio, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser | |
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
"A single-payer system is one of several options in achieving universal health care coverage, which is the ultimate goal," Gov.
Typically a single-payer system means the government pays for health care through tax collections. Private insurers still process claims and make benefit determinations, but they would function in a reduced role as a fiscal intermediary the same way they do for
"There are a few states that have been thinking single-payer all along," said
A single-payer system would mean
"If we do go down the road of universal health care, whether it's single-payer or some other form, you probably won't need the Prepaid Health Care Act because we'll find an alternative way to cover every single life," said
The issue has come up because the Hawaii Health Connector, the state's version of an Obamacare health insurance exchange, had a rough launch and has proved to be financially unsustainable. As a result, state lawmakers are looking for alternative ways to deliver health coverage as mandated by the Affordable Care Act.
The Connector has been plagued with computer problems from the get-go, causing it to miss its scheduled
In addition, the Connector is running out of money.
The Connector won't be able to generate enough revenue on its own because there are not enough residents who would use the exchange, Matsuda said. The only funding source is a 2 percent fee on premiums. The Connector is seeking a one-year extention from the federal government to use the grants but after that would still be left without enough money to survive, Matsuda told lawmakers.
The Connector needs
Lawmakers had proposed turning the nonprofit into a state agency financed by the general fund, but recently gutted a bill that would do so because of liability issues.
Matsuda declined to comment, saying through a spokesman that he didn't want to speculate on
Among other alternatives the state could pursue is having the federal government run the exchange to "get out from the whole mess," Miller said.
"At the end of the day, it may not make all that much difference," she said. "The differences between individual states are beginning to matter less and less. The whole rest of the country is catching up with
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