Mending Our Tattered Health Care Safety Net – OpEd [Eurasia Review]
Here's the good news. Only 1 percent of Americans are (1) lawful
Currently, 24.3 million individuals in
Medicaid enrollment is free, Obamacare insurance is heavily subsidized and almost all employer-provided insurance is required to be "affordable." So arguably, we have achieved "universal coverage," or something very close to it.
Here's the bad news. Almost all of the increase in health insurance coverage under Obamacare has been the result of an expansion of Medicaid. When Obamacare was being debated, its advocates never said they planned to insure the uninsured with Medicaid. But that is what happened.
What is wrong with that? Two things.
First, since Medicaid pays the lowest provider fees, Medicaid enrollees are the last patients doctors want to see. Almost a third of doctors won't take any new Medicaid patients at all. Second, since eligibility for Medicaid is determined by income, people find they are enrolled and disenrolled frequently over the space of a few years.
Families at the bottom of the income ladder find that as their income goes up and down and as their job opportunities ebb and flow, they bounce back and forth among eligibility for Medicaid, eligibility for subsidized insurance in the Obamacare exchanges, eligibility for employer-provided coverage and sometimes eligibility for none of the above. No continuity of health insurance usually means no continuity of medical care.
Going by the raw numbers, the
There has been a major change in the kind of private insurance people have, however. An increase in the number of people with coverage purchased in the Obamacare exchanges (where the average government subsidy is about
Aside from needlessly adding to the federal deficit, what's wrong with that? Four more things.
First, the typical plan offered in the exchanges pays provider rates that are not much more than what Medicaid pays. As a result, these plans look like Medicaid with a high deductible. Second, the deductibles are really high. In
At lower levels of income, the children may qualify for Medicaid and the adults may qualify for subsidies that reduce their out-of-pocket costs. But these freebies from government are far from "free." The benefits phase out quickly as income rises. So, if the family earns an additional
A fourth problem is that enrollees in Obamacare exchange plans often lack access to the best doctors and the best hospitals. Our
Consider these headlines:
Infant mortality rises for the first time in 20 years.
Almost four in ten Medicaid enrollees delay care because of cost.
Traffic to emergency rooms is higher than ever. The average wait time is 2½ hours.
Patients wait 13 hours for free health care.
Despite the appearance of universal coverage, we are doing a very poor job of providing care to those at the bottom of the income ladder. Careful studies have determined that Medicaid itself is a poor health insurance plan. In the most meticulous study ever done of the matter, researchers discovered that Medicaid in
It's not clear that Obamacare's exchange insurance is that much better. One reason
All that said, there are pockets of excellence here and there within the safety net.
The Parkland baby delivery program has been underway for several decades, and I wrote about it in Priceless. It involves extensive pre-natal and post-natal care provided by nurses. Most deliveries are done by midwives, rather than obstetricians.
Although the hospital does not release the figures, I suspect that this nonprofit institution actually makes a "profit" on baby delivery by piecing together various sources of government funding, minimizing the cost of personnel, and avoiding costly complications that lead to infant and maternal death.
Parkland's baby delivery program is an example of what Harvard professor
The first step toward that goal would be for the health policy community to recognize that the achievement of near universal health insurance coverage has not created universal access to high-quality care.
This article was also published in Forbes
a-url="https://www.eurasiareview.com/29112023-mending-our-tattered-health-care-safety-net-oped/" data-a2a-title="Mending Our Tattered Health Care Safety Net - OpEd">



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