Two recent developments in Washington underscore just how badly
many policymakers misunderstand the root cause of the public's
frustration with the health care system. At first glance, both
developments seem sensible, as well as overdue. But both completely
miss the point, and may even make things worse.
The first is President Clinton's decision to appoint an Advisory
Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care
Industry. The goal is "to find ways to ensure quality, and to
ensure that the rights of consumers in health care are protected,"
and develop a "consumer bill of rights." The second seemingly
reasonable development is the announcement of several bills that
would require health insurance companies to cover services that
most Americans believe should be in their health plans.
Specifically, Senator Alfonse D'Amato (R-NY) and Representative
Susan Molinari (R-NY) are sponsoring bills that would require
insurers to cover minimum hospital stays for mastectomies. Other
measures would mandate coverage of certain emergency services and
lift contractual restrictions contained in physician contracts in
some managed care plans to limit physician communication with
patients (known as "gag clauses").
WRONG DIAGNOSIS
The problem is that these proposals, particularly the mandate
bills, rush to cure the symptoms of the disease without recognizing
its causes. The underlying problem is that typical working
Americans do not choose and own their health insurance as they do
their homeowner's insurance and life insurance. Instead, employers
choose and own the plans. That part of the employee's compensation
earmarked for a health insurance fringe benefit is tax-free to the
employee, but there is a stiff price: Families lose control of
their benefits. So insurance companies work for employers,
concerned primarily with keeping costs down by trimming benefits,
rather than for families concerned with quality and service.
Given this arrangement, families cannot do what they normally do
when they are dissatisfied with a product or service: change to
another company. Instead, the only way powerless families can force
insurers to focus on their needs is to persuade their employers to
change plans or hope the U.S. Congress will enact a mandate. That
is why there is support for mandates. Yet mandates miss the
underlying point: As long as the tax system effectively locks
working Americans into employer-sponsored health coverage, families
will be frustrated with how they are treated by health
insurers.
Even as a Band-Aid "solution" to this much deeper problem,
mandates raise a host of problems and unintended side
effects.
(1) Mandated benefit laws increase the cost of health care
and make insurance even less affordable and accessible for many
needy individuals
This effect is particularly troublesome for the 40 million
Americans currently uninsured for some period each year. Over 1,000
such laws have been enacted at the state level, each requiring that
a specific benefit, procedure, or provider service be covered in
every state-regulated insurance policy sold. The costs of these
mandates vary from state to state, but can be heavy.
Example
The U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) estimates that
mandated benefit laws account for 12 percent of claims costs in
Virginia and 22 percent in Maryland.1
Example
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the
federal law enacted in 1996 requiring private health insurers to
cover 48-hour maternity stays will cost the federal government $223
million over four years, and that direct private-sector costs
(increases in health premiums paid by employers and employees) will
increase by $745 million over four years.2
Example
According to the CBO, the mental health parity legislation
adopted in the last Congress will increase the federal deficit by
an estimated $590 million over six years. This is due to increased
costs to the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP),
which covers federal workers and dependents, and lost tax revenue
because of lower employee compensation (because employers will
reduce wages to accommodate increased health plan costs). The CBO's
preliminary estimate is that this provision will raise
private-sector costs by more than $100 million over this same
period.3
(2) Mandated benefit laws--particularly laws that define the
duration and scope of specific benefits--lock in a standard of care
that may be inappropriate in the future
This is the case with proposals like 48-hour maternity stays
or required coverage of inpatient stays for mastectomies. Once
these mandates are in statute, it becomes very difficult to change
insurance benefits later, when state-of-the-art medical practices
change. It entails national debate, protracted lobbying by interest
groups, opposition from interests favoring the old mandate, and an
act of Congress. Imagine, for example, that Congress had enacted
legislation in 1980 requiring insurers to cover mothers and
newborns in an inpatient setting for the average length of stay for
a normal delivery at that time (77 hours).4 Any attempt
to amend that law today so that resources could be used for more
appropriate medical benefits would face heavy opposition from
hospitals specializing in maternity care.
Members of Congress must realize that mandating a sensible
practice today means locking in what could become a costly,
outmoded practice tomorrow. Thus, mandated benefits can impede
progress, innovation, and improvements in the delivery of health
care. Dr. Janet Roberto, a family physician, explained the problem
at a recent congressional briefing. Benefit mandates imposed
ostensibly to help doctors and patients, noted Dr. Roberto, can
impede the doctor patient relationship by creating a situation in
which the patient, whose insurance offers something different or
more comprehensive, begins to question the physician's judgment
regarding what treatment is best. "When a patient knows of a
benefit that is mandated or in their terms 'automatically covered,'
they immediately utilize that service as a need, whether it is or
is not personally in their best interest.... Mandates can, in
effect, take away the physician judgment as to what is best for the
patient."5
(3) Although mandated benefit laws do not prohibit advances
in medicine directly, they can diminish the incentive to find new
and better ways to deliver care
Nurse Lillie Shockney of Johns Hopkins University Hospital in
Baltimore, Maryland, recently testified before the Maryland state
legislature on the politically charged issue of outpatient
mastectomies. Shockney is both an oncology nurse caring for cancer
patients and a double mastectomy breast cancer survivor. She spoke
of the Johns Hopkins outpatient mastectomy program's success in
discovering improved treatment modalities for breast cancer
patients, testifying that the program's emphasis on outpatient
mastectomies was due to effectiveness and patient satisfaction, not
to pressure from managed care. Advances in anesthesia, as well as a
recognition of the primary role that family support plays in the
healing process for breast cancer victims, have allowed Johns
Hopkins to convert the majority of its mastectomy cases to the
outpatient setting.
Shockney stresses that the ultimate decision is between the
patient and her doctor. She fears, however, that legislation
mandating inpatient coverage will block the development of new
programs like that at Johns Hopkins:
I hope that this legislation [mandated inpatient mastectomy coverage] doesn't discourage hospitals from developing such programs though, since this bill will make it easier for them to simply continue to provide care the "old way." The breast cancer patient isn't being done justice if hospitals continue doing this procedure the old way.6
(4) With the growth of physician-sponsored and
hospital-sponsored health plans, mandated benefit laws will hurt
many of the providers now advocating their passage
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
reports that 39 states have provider service organization (PSO)
regulations and that PSOs are operating currently in 27 states. A
PSO is a voluntary network of physicians and hospitals that both
insures and provides health services under contract with health
care purchasers. Physician and hospital groups have lobbied
actively for federal preemption of state regulations and separate
federal regulations of PSOs as they seek entree into the Medicare
market. One reason for this is that PSOs find certain state
mandated benefit laws burdensome and costly as they take on the new
role of both provider and insurer. If Congress continues to enact
health benefit mandates, however, PSO operators will find
themselves increasingly facing the same costly requirements at the
federal level that they are seeking to avoid at the state
level.
(5) By singling out mastectomies or maternity care,
politicians grant favored status to those suffering from a
particular disease or disability, often responding to organized
pressure rather than to medical priorities
Increasingly--and disturbingly--both the attention Congress
pays to medical issues and the actions it takes on those issues are
determined by the political lobbying efforts of particular groups
rather than by sensible medical priorities. In the case of
mandates, of course, this lobbying is a result of a feeling among
Americans that they are powerless in dealing with insurers. But the
political "solution" favors those suffering from certain diseases
at the expense of others afflicted with different diseases.
What is worse, Members of Congress overstep the bounds of their
professional competence by determining not only the type of
benefits, but also the duration and scope of those benefits. The
politicians' penchant for playing doctor is summed up neatly by
Washington Post columnist and trained physician Charles
Krauthammer: "I am sorely provoked by the arrogance of a chamberful
of lawyers stretching out its magic wand to anoint with special
protection one, and only one, tragic affliction."7
The recent back-and-forth between Congress and the President
(politicians) and the National Cancer Institute (scientists)
regarding mammography screening standards shows just what can
happen when politics and medicine are entwined. The NCI reported
originally that "evidence does not support" the need for
mammography screening for women under 50 years of age, but
Congress, the Administration, and some advocacy groups were
unconvinced. After much media attention and the passage of a
congressional resolution indicating the displeasure of lawmakers,
the NCI revised its guidelines. The only difference between
mandating inpatient hospital coverage for mastectomies and passing
a resolution that mammography screening should begin at 40 years of
age--the efficacy and desirability of both of which are outside the
scope of knowledge of most politicians--is one of degree. The
question is not what the benefits or standards should be, but
whether lawmakers are capable of making that determination. The
answer is that they are not: By politicizing the practice of
medicine, politicians endanger patients.
DEALING WITH THE PROBLEM
The challenge for Congress is not to micromanage medicine, but
to make it possible for Americans to walk away from a health plan
that does not meet their individual needs and choose one that does.
Members of Congress can do this thanks to the wide choice they have
under the FEHBP. This power to "fire" their own insurer if they are
dissatisfied is why Members of Congress rarely feel it is necessary
to impose mandates on FEHBP plans. Changing the tax code to remove
the financial penalties impeding choice for private-sector workers
will give Americans real power over their own health insurers.
Enacting mandates will not.
Endnotes
- U.S. General Accounting Office, Health Insurance Regulation:
Varying State Requirements Affect Cost of Insurance, GAO/HEHS
96-161, August, 19, 1996.
- Congressional Budget Office, letter to Congress, cost estimate
of S. 969, Newborns' and Mothers' Health Protection Act of 1996,
July 17, 1996.
- Congressional Budget Office, memo to Congress, cost estimate of
Mental Health Parity Amendments to VA/HUD appropriations bill,
September 10, 1996.
- U.S. General Accounting Office, Maternity Care: Appropriate
Follow-Up Services Critical with Short Hospital Stays, GAO/HEHS
96-207, September 11, 1996.
- Statement of Dr. Janet M. Roberto on behalf of Concerned Women
for America at congressional health care briefing, February 21,
1997.
- Testimony of Lillie Shockney, RN, on behalf of Johns Hopkins
University Hospital before Maryland state legislature, January 30,
1997.
- Charles Krauthammer, "Play-Doctors on the Hill," The Washington Post, February 14, 1997.