1 / 8

Massachusetts Health Care Reform: How it was Crafted, Why it has Lasted

Massachusetts Health Care Reform: How it was Crafted, Why it has Lasted. Jim Klocke Executive Vice President, Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. Today’s Presentation. Baseline Conditions Pre-Reform Key Elements of the Massachusetts Plan How It Came Together Recent Issues

kamin
Télécharger la présentation

Massachusetts Health Care Reform: How it was Crafted, Why it has Lasted

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Massachusetts Health Care Reform:How it was Crafted, Why it has Lasted Jim Klocke Executive Vice President, Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce

  2. Today’s Presentation • Baseline Conditions Pre-Reform • Key Elements of the Massachusetts Plan • How It Came Together • Recent Issues • Suggestions for the Federal Effort

  3. Baseline Conditions Pre-Reform—Massachusetts in 2005 • Percent of population with health insurance well above national average • Availability of employer-provided coverage well above national average • Existing Free Care Pool—large and established, funding from • 1) state and federal governments, • 2) hospital payments, • 3) insurer payments (latter two passed on to employers who contribute to employee health insurance premiums)

  4. Key Elements of Massachusetts Reform Plan • Individual health insurance mandate • Subsidies—Free coverage for individuals with incomes up to 150% FPL, scaled subsidies for those with incomes 151% - 300% FPL • Companies required to provide pre-tax access to health insurance via Section 125 plans—if not, have to pay workers’ emergency room bills (this provision does not require an employer contribution to employee health insurance) • “Fair Share” assessment to ensure that all firms contribute to free care pool (not an employer mandate)

  5. “Fair Share” Assessment • Amount calculated each year by formula in law tied to free care pool usage • Amount capped at $295/worker/year • Paid by firms with 11+ employees that don’t make a “fair and reasonable” contribution to employee health insurance premiums—defined in regulations according to take-up rate and % of employer subsidy • Vast majority of firms are in compliance

  6. How It Came Together • Compromise Major stakeholders (government leaders, advocacy organizations, business community, provider community) got some but not all of what each was looking for • Patient Negotiations Months of negotiations followed initial proposals made by Governor, Speaker, Senate President • Guiding Principle—Keep everyone at the table One of the biggest reasons Massachusetts plan was achieved

  7. Recent Issues • Fair Share Assessment • Summer 2008—Patrick Administration proposed expanded definition of “fair and reasonable” premium contribution • Issues—number of firms paying under current definition, ERISA risk, prospect of penalties on high-benefit firms • After extensive discussions, modified definition adopted • Minimum Creditable Coverage • What must a health plan include to comply with the individual mandate?—legal lists vs. actuarial equivalents • Health Insurance Premium Inflation • Is, and will remain, largest challenge for Massachusetts plan because of individual mandate

  8. Suggestions for the Federal Effort • If your experience is like ours, “reform” will evolve as proposals are scrutinized, criticized, improvised • A bill with 1-3 significant reforms is preferable to a “comprehensive reform” bill, because implementation will bring both positive and negative surprises • The Perfect is the Enemy of the Good, And of Final Passage

More Related