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With all the distractions concerning the appalling Obamacare
marketplace roll-out taking center-stage it would be wise for the country to try
to keep in mind the bigger picture. It would be wise to remember that the
economic/business model of our current health care system is simply unsustainable
for the future. This current model spends more, wastes more, and takes up a
larger percentage of our economic output than any other country in the world.
The model simply has to change or it is going to collapse under its own weight.
Obamacare can (and should) be justifiably criticized for
many deficiencies. However, we also need to keep in mind there are many other
culprits that have put us in the position we’re in today. Obamacare is not the
only cause. There is enough blame to go around for everyone.
United Healthcare recently announced it would be cutting
loose between 10 and 20% of its Medicare Advantage provider network across the
country. As is the normal plan of action in health care today, there was little
communication or dialogue between stakeholders and the action has already
resulted in lawsuits, further mistrust, and confusion for seniors as to whether
their doctor was going to be part of the Medicare Advantage network in 2014
(especially during the Medicare open enrollment currently underway). The timing
sucked for the consumers but it was easy to place the blame on Obamacare with
all the other media hype going on today. A spokesman for United Healthcare stated
(from the Wall Street Journal),” It’s no secret we are under substantial
funding pressure from the federal government.” The message? Blame Obamacare.
Yes, Obamacare did cut funding for the Medicare Advantage
plans to the health plans providing them. Numerous studies point to the fact
that these became a profit center for health insurance plans and cost 10-15%
more than traditional Medicare- and these costs are being funded by the
taxpayers. The reduced funding was justified to address the costs of the
program.
And yes, in order to address the cost of health care health
plans will need to focus on the significant cost differences existing between
physicians and hospitals across the country. Remember the Atul Gawande article
that showed some areas of the country spend twice the Medicare dollars on
health care for no particular reason. Some doctors cost more depending on where
they live (see the Dartmouth Atlas if you want proof)
So, while United Healthcare is justified in creating a more
cost-effective and efficient provider network they are not justified in blaming
Obamacare for the reason. Reducing the provider network is something that could
have been done many months ago to avoid putting consumers in the middle.
Obamacare simply provided good cover.
Consumers need to be prepared. This won't be the last health insurance organization to make some significant changes to their network. This isn't just about Obamacare- this how a primarily for-profit insurance system is going to react when they finally have to focus on reducing costs. And, that's the ultimate goal.
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