Catastrophic Insurance for All

Hook, Janet

CATASTROPHIC INSURANCE FOR ALL by Janet Hook When we add layers of protection for the elderly, let's remember that even minor illnesses may mean financial disaster for people without any...

...Senator Abraham Ribicoff pleaded with labor to drop its all-or-nothing strategy and support a politically Janet Hook is a reporter for Congressional Quarterly...
...And for the elderly, the plan wouldn't even cover nursing home costs, which are a more serious problem for them...
...A Washington-area family, for example, faced $2,000-a-month medical expenses to care for a 17-year-old daughter who had severe brain damage after a car accident...
...Another is to tax the estates of deceased recipients of government medical benefits to recover the difference between what the government spent on them and what they paid in premiums...
...Income eligibility standards in some are shockingly low...
...This proposal answers the conservative objection that government health care support undercuts the incentive for kids to care for their parents...
...their poverty rate is now lower than that of those under 65...
...A modest version of this plan suggested by Barbara Torrey, an analyst with the Census Bureau who formerly monitored HHS as an analyst at the Office of Management and Budget, would have raised an estimated $10 billion, while providing that no more than 25 percent of the estate could be taxed to recover the Medicare benefits...
...Although the program, like welfare, is partly financed by the federal government, states have wide latitude to say how poor one has to be to qualify for benefits under the program...
...Victims of a car accident, cancer, or Alzheimer's disease have in common the tremendous expense of extended care...
...Bowen's proposal would cap out-of-pocket expenses for Medicare beneficiaries at $2,000 a year if they pay an additional $4.92 a month in premiums—on top of the $15.50 monthly premium they now pay for Medicare's "Part B" insurance for non-hospital expenses...
...Matilda Sutphin of Melvin, West Virginia, told the Charleston Gazette-Mail that she bought Medigap because "Danny Thomas kept writin' me about his insurance...
...Because the program also focuses on narrow categories of the poor, some people— generally able-bodied men and their families— cannot qualify for Medicaid no matter how poor they are...
...Another option would be to allow the nearpoor to buy into the program with premiums geared to their income...
...At a House Ways and Means hearing on the subject last year, Rep...
...So, for example, if a man had paid $9,000 in Medicare payroll taxes over his working years and received benefits worth $20,000, after his death $11,000 could be recovered...
...There are ways to finance new health care that are not being used now...
...While in the sixties catastrophic insurance was considered the lead weight that could sink the whole Medicare bill, it came to be regarded in the seventies as the middle-class sweetener that would make it easier for a reluctant populace to swallow national health insurance...
...Bowen's plan to provide catastrophic coverage under Medicare would help only the roughly 800,000 elderly who run up medical bills exceeding $2,000 a year...
...Bowen's Medicare plan also doesn't seriously address those who don't even have basic insurance...
...The principal conservative complaint is that Bowen's plan would offer a service already available through the private market's Medigap...
...Daub's father was covered by Medicare, and had a supplemental private insurance policy, which meant he "only" had to spend about $20,000 of his own...
...But organized labor and other liberal forces objected to plans that provided only catastrophic coverage...
...Liberals may now conclude with regret that they missed a great opportunity to move in the direction of broader health insurance coverage...
...They had the lowest earning capacity, the highest medical bills, and the most difficult time getting private insurance at affordable rates...
...In 1985, for example, a . family of four generally could not qualify for Medicaid in South Carolina if it had more than about $5,000 in gross income...
...The plan urged by Otis Bowen, the secretary of Health and Human Services, would expand medicare to cover catastrophic hospital bills for the elderly...
...Of course the real problem with Bowen's Medicare proposal is not what it does, but what it doesn't do...
...No program to plug the gaps in the health care system will be cheap, and this is not the time to be adding billions to the federal budget...
...Equally important, the elderly were beginning to emerge as a potent political force...
...Ideally, the current fervor for catastrophic insurance could provide an opportunity to link the political sex-appeal of helping the elderly to the less popular need to help the poor...
...For that group, particularly those who are poor, even having a broken leg set or having a baby delivered can wreck the family budget...
...achievable plan: "Isn't 50 percent of something better than 100 percent of nothing...
...But unlike 20 years ago, the elderly as a group are not the neediest segment of the population...
...In all the coziness of consensus, let's make sure the right holes are patched...
...But subsidies may be needed to keep the premiums affordable...
...That's not to say the elderly shouldn't get catastrophic protection but that those benefits should be self-financed for those who can afford it—and that any new direct federal spending should go first to such things as expanding Medicaid to improve basic health insurance for those lacking any coverage...
...The nation's most serious effort to institute a comprehensive plan to cover America's basic health needs was initiated in the late 1940s by Harry Truman, but was defeated by the American Medical Association in one of the most expensive lobbying campaigns in history...
...Secretary Bowen's report estimated such a plan would cost $15 billion if it included all people with income below 125 percent of the poverty line, with premiums capped at 5 percent of income...
...One is to tax Medicare benefits so that the government will recover amounts paid to wealthy recipients who don't need the aid...
...Ironically, the last time Congress seriously considered giving the federal government a role in paying for catastrophic health costs, it was liberal D?mocrats who were on the front line of opposition...
...When Medicare was enacted in 1965, it focused on the limited but ground-breaking goal of covering short-term care for the elderly...
...Critics said it was an expensive add-on that far exceeded what most people got under private health insurance...
...Some 1.4 million elderly people are in nursing homes, but Medicare doesn't pay for much of that care...
...They had long been pushing for a bigger prize, national health insurance, and feared any half-measure could take the impetus out of their drive...
...Politicians will likely be tempted to restrict catastrophic initiatives to the elderly and call it a day for the same reasons that health reformers in the 1950s and 1960s focused on that group...
...In 1979, legislation to guarantee catastrophic coverage for extraordinarily high medical bills was gathering steam in the Senate...
...Obviously, removing the 25 percent cap would bring in a far heftier chunk of change...
...If those nephews and nieces want to get Uncle George's millions, let them take care of him...
...Well, that's all very nice, you say, but how could we possibly afford such truly comprehensive catastrophic insurance...
...Because not all the uninsured are poor, some people may have to be reached by other mechanisms...
...For these poor, even routine costs can be catastrophic...
...During the Medicare debate, the one serious proposal to include both catastrophic and nursing home coverage was considered a deadly amendment...
...Others complained that catastrophic health insurance would give hospitals new incentives to skew resources towards expensive, hightech equipment and treatments, rather than basic care...
...Total nursing home costs hit $32 billion in 1984, roughly 40 percent of which was paid by Medicaid, 1 percent by private insurance, and the rest by patients and their families...
...CATASTROPHIC INSURANCE FOR ALL by Janet Hook When we add layers of protection for the elderly, let's remember that even minor illnesses may mean financial disaster for people without any health insurance...
...Uncle George's millions If the need for catastrophic coverage is so broad and should therefore be politically appealing, one has to wonder why it has never been enacted...
...He said it [ a hospital stay] would take all the savings I had and then I would have nothing...
...If the government pays for the caring, it should get its money back before those nephews and nieces get a dime...
...The family brought the semi-comatose girl home and bore the brunt of the expense for at-home care, The Washington Post reported, after their insurance companies stopped paying for the $8,000-a-week cost of hospitalization...
...But beyond these provisions, why should the deceased's relatives benefit from the money the government has spent on his care...
...But they were on to something in 1979...
...Private businesses have tried to curb employee benefit costs, and since 1983, a new Medicare payment system has reduced incentives for hospitals to keep patients too long or to provide unnecessarily expensive treatments...
...It left them still exposed to the risk of catastrophic expenses, however...
...The spread of AIDS will further increase the number of people without insurance who need expensive medical care...
...Since 1980, concerns about the inflationary efWhy should the deceased's relatives benefit from the money the government has spent on his care...
...It is important that whatever money is raised be devoted to the beginnings of catastrophic protection for people of all ages...
...Hal Daub, a Nebraska Republican, told his colleagues that his 67-year-old father had incurred almost $300,000 in medical bills from seven months in the hospital, including four in intensive care...
...So a man earning $6,000 annually would pay no more than $300 to gain full medical coverage...
...States should be encouraged to set up insurance risk pools to make coverage available to people with chronic illnesses and those who cannot obtain a private policy at reasonable rates...
...When health reformers sought a more modest proposal in a strategic retreat from full-blown national health insurance, they looked for limitations not only on what was covered but also on who was covered...
...But it is a measure of how far the political ground has shifted since the battle to enact Medicare that a Reagan administration official can agree with Ted Kennedy that the federal government has a role in filling some of those gaps...
...For humane reasons, such a tax should not be collectible until the surviving spouse also dies and the care and education of any remaining minor children has been provided for...
...To get Medicaid to pay for nursing home care, the elderly now have to do just that: make themselves poor, through the humiliating, embittering process of "spending down" Just as important, expensive illnesses and conditions hit the young as well as the elderly...
...The government, presumably, would also be less likely to sell the elderly policies they don't need...
...With more imaginative funding ideas we could afford a wide-ranging catastrophic plan...
...That principle should not be forgotten as the current revival of interest in catastrophic insurance gathers momentum...
...Ideally, the government would expand eligibility for Medicaid and require all states to have "medically needy" programs...
...But passage of catastrophic insurance alone was generally opposed by proponents of broader care who feared it would undermine middle class support for improved coverage for the poor...
...The principle underlying their resistance was that it is hard to justify giving priority to expanding benefits for people who already have basic health insurance coverage when there are so many people who don't have even that...
...A 1985 survey for the House Aging Committee found that it took only 13 weeks in a nursing home for two out of three single elderly patients to impoverish themselves...
...Studies have shown that the average cost of treating an AIDS patient is $70,000 but that many of these patients lose their jobs and therefore their health insurance soon after diagnosis...
...Our current health care system provides basic coverage for 28 million elderly through Medicare...
...fect of covering catastrophic costs have become less compelling...
...I wouldn't have nothing and being a burden on the kids and everything?' But often the elderly are persuaded to buy several overlapping Medigap policies that fall far short when it comes to covering serious costs...
...Almost all of the comprehensive health schemes debated in the seventies included a catastrophic insurance feature...
...Prodded by high-pressure sales techniques warning that disaster may be around the corner, many have turned to supplementary private insurance known as "Medigap" to cover what Medicare doesn't...
...Contrary to the impression left by countless stray presidential anecdotes, the poor do not have all their medical problems taken care of by government...
...Estimates are that the AIDS population will grow to 100,000 or even half a million, the care of which will cost $15 billion or more by 1991...
...The elderly were particularly appealing because they were presumed to be needy—even without a means test, which was, and is, regarded as stigmatizing...
...If those nephews and nieces want to get Uncle George's millions, let them take care of him...
...No one could argue that kids thrust their parents on the government dole just to safeguard their inheritance if that inheritance will be tapped to pay for the father's dialysis...
...Government support, the argument goes, helps children preserve their own wealth as well as keep intact that juicy bit of inheritance that awaits them...
...A letter from Danny Thomas Most people know someone who has been hit by an illness that requires long, expensive care...
...within a year, more than 80 percent were impoverished...
...Almost everyone has given up on national health insurance, and in these austere times, health reformers are legitimately inclined to take whatever incremental gains they can get...
...Medicaid only covers half the poverty population...
...The old tactical objection that enacting catastrophic insurance would sabotage a broader health care program is less relevant...
...Such an expansion would not do anything for the 30 million or so young and middle aged who have no health insurance and for whom even a $2,000 medical bill could be catastrophic...
...I n the current debate over providing catastrophic health insurance, the loudest critics have been conservatives who think this would be an unnecessary expansion of government...
...Ten million people have basic health insurance but have inadequate coverage for exorbitant health bills...
...But the government could give the elderly a better buy because much of the revenue from Medigap premiums goes to administrative costs and profits...
...But there is now no ceiling on the out-of-pocket expenses they may face...
...After 150 days in the hospital, the elderly pay all their expenses...
...They turned their attention to the elderly...
...Medicare beneficiaries have to pay at least 20 percent of their doctors' bills, a deductible for each hospitalization, and a hefty share of the tab for hospital stays longer than 60 days...
...Such programs, already running in about two-thirds of the states, allow the near-poor to qualify for Medicaid if their medical expenses bring them within income eligibility standards...
...Moreover, about 35 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries don't even have a Medigap policy...
...They got 100 percent of nothing...
...Routine catastrophies For the elderly, a more fearful prospect than long hospitalizations is paying for nursing home care for which there is now little government help...

Vol. 19 • February 1987 • No. 1


 
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