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REKINDLING HEALTH CARE REFORM |
The author is with the University of California at San Francisco School of Pharmacy, Department of Clinical Pharmacy.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Ellen R. Shaffer, PhD, MPH, 98 Seal Rock Dr, San Francisco, CA 94121-1437 (e-mail: ershaffer{at}earthlink.net).
| ABSTRACT |
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Recent evaluations of the California Health Service Plan (CHSP) confirmed that financing health care through a single government payer can provide universal coveragewhile saving significantly on health care spendingto a degree unparalleled by alternative approaches. Public ownership of the delivery system can further provide authority and accountability for critical reforms that improve the populations health and quality of care, including coordination of the delivery system.
The federal governments State Planning Grant Program provides states with funding to develop plans to cover their uninsured populations. California created a Health Care Options Project that requested proposals that could expand coverage and contracted with a financial modeler and a qualitative analyst to evaluate the resulting plans. The CHSP was one of 9 plans evaluated through this process.
| INTRODUCTION |
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The California Health Service Plan (CHSP), developed as part of the California SPG program, is a case in point. Analysis showed that even by conservative estimates, the CHSP (which the author wrote) would achieve both universal coverage and savings over current spending. Delivery system reforms intended to improve the populations health and quality of care, such as expanded primary care, would also reduce costs. The plan shifts responsibility for cost control from users to providers and does not impose cost sharing such as copayments or deductibles.
| STATE PLANNING GRANTS |
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The resulting state reports include valuable information on access to health care and are posted on-line at the HRSA Web site.7 Some information has been long established but little known by most Americans and many policymakers. This includes the significant savings achieved by single-payer plans8,9 and the fact that the uninsured are predominantly working people and their families, not the unemployed.10 States generally recognized that successful solutions would require federal involvement. Among the newer findings were those in Massachusetts, Oregon, and Delaware that many uninsured people earn incomes well over the poverty line. Minnesota and Oregon concluded that expanding public insurance programs would not significantly "crowd out" existing employer coverage.
| CALIFORNIA HEALTH CARE OPTIONS PROJECT |
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Nine proposals were selected for development. Four incremental proposals included expansion of the existing employer high-risk pool and State Child Health Insurance programs and offering individual and employer tax credits. Two plans sought to increase employers contributions. Three proposal authors proposed "single-payer" plans, in which the state government would finance and pay for health services. The Lewin Group was chosen to model costs and coverage of the proposals, and AZA Consulting contracted to evaluate qualitative components, including access and cultural competence.
| CALIFORNIA HEALTH SERVICE PLAN: FINANCIAL SAVINGS, UNIVERSAL COVERAGE |
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CHSP drew on state experiences with failing private hospitals in rural areas that converted to public status as district hospitals, and on lessons in financing and reimbursement from Europe and Canada. The states increasing rate of hospitalizations that could be prevented with adequate ambulatory care, for conditions such as asthma and pneumonia, further supported the need for public health and delivery system reforms to control costs and improve health.
The CHSP plan would save $4.6 billion in the first year compared with present total health spending, and $45.3 billion in 2012, after full phase-in of primary care reforms (Figure 1
). This estimate also includes the cost to the state of acquiring hospitals and other components of the delivery system.
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The model also showed that households would save an average of $813 a year from the CHSP, after accounting for effects such as increased taxes, with variations by age and income. All households earning less than $100 000 a year would save money. Households earning $30 000 to $50 000 a year would save $1615, whereas those with incomes over $150 000 would pay an additional $234 a month, or about 1.8% of their income, in return for comprehensive benefits. Although expansions of employer-based health insurance generally would require nearly impossible changes to federal law, single-payer plans could be implemented by states.
The full proposals, and the quantitative and qualitative evaluations, are posted on-line at http://www.healthcareoptions.ca.gov, in the Documents Library.
| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication September 21, 2002.
| References |
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2. Connolly C. Health cares soaring cost takes a toll; squeeze hits workers, firms and government. Washington Post.July 9, 2002:A1.
3. Derickson A. "Health for three-thirds of the nation": public health advocacy of universal access to medical care in the United States. Am J Public Health.2002;92:180190.
4. American Public Health Association. APHA 14 points on universal health care: toward a national health program for the United States. Available at: http://www.apha.org/legislative/Issues/14points.htm. Accessed October 28, 2002.
5. McBeath WH. Health for all: a public health vision. Am J Public Health.1991;81:15601565.
6. US Department of Health and Human Services. State Planning Grants Program questions and answers. Available at: http://www.hrsa.gov/osp/stateplanning/newQ-As.htm. Accessed July 11, 2002.
7. US Department of Health and Human Services. Overview of the State Planning Grants Program. Available at: http://www.hrsa.gov/osp/stateplanning/default.htm. Accessed July 11, 2002.
8. Wellstone PD, Shaffer ER. The American Health Security Act. A single-payer proposal. N Engl J Med.1993;328:14891493.
9. Estimates of Health Care Reform Proposals From the 102nd Congress. Washington, DC: US Congressional Budget Office; 1993.
10. Blendon RJ, Young JT, DesRoches CM. The uninsured, the working uninsured, and the public. Health Aff (Millwood).1999;18(6):203211.
11. Population distribution by insurance status, 19992000 [The Henry Kaiser Family Foundation State Health Facts Online Web site]. Available at: http://www.statehealthfacts.kff.org/cgi-bin/healthfacts.cgi?. Accessed September 9, 2002.
12. Quantitative analysis by the Lewin Group, Appendices BJ, p 250. Available at: http://www.healthcareoptions.ca.gov/doclib.asp (PDF file). Accessed November 4, 2002.
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