The Rationale Behind Medicare Rationing
Is rationing in Medicare inevitable? Blogging at The Washington Post last week, Suzy Khimm suggested that it may be:
Government cost-cutting provisions like the new Independent Medicare Advisory Board have raised concerns that bureaucrats will end up "rationing" care. But the reality is that someone is going to have to say "no" to excess spending at some point, as I've explained previously. "Rationing is going to go on within the Medicare system. It's a fact of life. … The question's going to be, is that decision going to be made by government and imposed top down under the current system?" the Cato Institute's Michael Tanner told Politico last month.
Rationing is a loaded word, but the larger point is correct. As long as there are publicly financed health programs like Medicare, those programs will be forced to operate with limited resources—perhaps generously limited, but limited somehow. And that means it will be necessary for policymakers to come up with some system by which to affirm priorities and determine how exactly to expend those resources: A panel of health care bureaucrats? Comparative effectiveness research? Means testing? Vouchers? Medicare has many flaws, but the biggest single problem is that it pretends to offer an unlimited commitment, which means there is little to restrain its growth. It's a system that has essentially declared that all priorities are equal, which is another way of saying that there are no priorities at all. In the medium to long run, that theoretically unlimited commitment will run up against actual resource barriers. Khimm goes on:
As Tanner points out, Paul Ryan's Medicare plan intends to empower individuals to make such decisions, giving them a subsidy to purchase insurance on their own rather than having the federal government cover all their expenses. But as the recession may show, if individuals have less to work with up front, they could end up "self-rationing" and forgoing important treatment due to financial hardship or poorly informed decisions.
"You want to be changing habits in a good way. A lot of care was not terribly necessary, but you really want to make sure that people are still getting appropriate care," Kate Sullivan Hare, a long-time health policy observer, tells me in an interview. "Is it 'self-rationing' or rational care?"
The worry, in other words, is that left to their own devices and with limited financial resources, individuals won't make good health care decisions. It's an easy charge to make, and it makes intuitive sense to a lot of people. After all, medicine is incredibly, and increasingly, complex. Most people do need expert advice in order to inform their decision making. And that's why I suspect there's probably a role for privately coordinated networks of local providers to help guide individuals through the health system. But that's hardly unusual. Professional, expert advice is useful in most complex consumer markets.
It's also worth noting that our current setup, which is heavily dependent on third-party payers and fee-for-service providers, offers little or no incentive for patients or their providers to make trade-offs when it comes to care. Nor is there much culture or infrastructure devoted to providing patients with better information.
But I also think it's easy to underestimate how individuals will respond to the responsibility of making more of their own health care decisions. As I've written previously, a number of studies (though not all) have shown that individuals enrolled in consumer-driven care plans that pair high-deductible insurance with health spending accounts not only show substantial savings than those enrolled in traditional insurance, they also tend to utilize more in the way of preventive services. In the context of our current health care debates, rationing may be best understood as the process by which we make choices and set priorities. And it turns out that when you give individuals more freedom to choose and set priorities for themselves, they frequently choose pretty well.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Just kill the old people.
better solution: Let natural selection take care of things.
The worry, in other words, is that left to their own devices and with limited financial resources, individuals won't make good health care decisions.
So humans will evolve brains that make financially sound health care decisions. In five generations we'll laugh at our stupidity, unless we evolve individuals who know only to suck at the teat.
you're a crazy bastard
Freedom means being free from choice, not being free to make choices.
Choices are hard.
It's much better to have government make choices for you.
The best decisions happen when the decision makers know very little about what they are deciding and are not affected by the outcome.
Rationing is a loaded word, but the larger point is correct. As long as there are publicly financed health programs like Medicare, those programs will be forced to operate with limited resources and so with private insurance.
It takes a person to make 250K a year for medicare to break even with their tax contributions. WTF, do you think it will take in private insurance dollars for the elderly?
"And that means it will be necessary for policymakers to come up with some system by which to affirm priorities and determine how exactly to expend those resources: A panel of health care bureaucrats? Comparative effectiveness research? Means testing? Vouchers?"
Excuse me, but not only is Medicare rationing inevitable--it's already in place and has been for decades.
Please read about "medical necessity" and NCDs and LCDs.
Medicare already rations itself through the device of what is called "medical necessity".
There is criteria already in place that rejects millions of Medicare claims every year for not being "medically necessary".
This is the means by which the government sometimes refuses to give hip replacements to seniors because wheelchairs are less expensive.
I've known people who've gone to the cardiologist, been given a prescription--and had their claims denies as not being "medically necessary". The patient typically protests, "But how can it not be medically necessary--my doctor says I need it!" That's the definition of rationing.
I worked as a quality control analyst for a software company that made software to check for "medical necessity" (among other things) for some of the biggest hospitals and hospital chains in the country.
The process by which NCDs and LCDs are set and altered is well known--and has been in place for decades.
This is how Medicare decides how often they'll pay for a CT scan--which lab tests they'll pay for and how often. Which procedures they'll pay for--all depending on age factors, what you're coded for, etc.
Rationing is already built into the system. Ask your Grandma! Chances are she's had her doctor's recommendation shot down by Medicare for not being "medically necessary" at least once in her life--usually many times.
Don't you think cancer patients could get better and more care if they weren't stuck in Medicare?!
Rationing is already part of Medicare--the question ObamaCare brings to the table is how much bigger rationing will get and how many more people it will affect.
If ObamaCare keeps going on its present course, no one will escape the clutches of the government boards who make LCD and NCD determinations. ...except for the ultra-rich.
Having to choose between our quality of life and what we're willing to pay for is a tough call at any age--but I want to make that choice myself. I don't want that choice made for me by some government bureaucrat. ...but that isn't the way it will be for Medicare patients in the future--that's the way it is now!
Ken Shultz, your points are veritable but they also apply to private insurance.
Only the wealthy will be free from medical 'casting-off'
That's absolutely false.
If you had an Aetna policy? ...or one of many other PPOs...?
And millions of lower middle class Americans did have that option!
Then your options were nowhere near as tightly circumscribed.
Everybody who worked at a number of companies I've worked for had that option.
Part of ObamaCare specifically seeks to punish employers for making such options available to their employees.
And that's not an opinion. That's a fact.
Really, the system doesn't fuck AMAP now. Insurance employees are not given bonuses when they can void policies?
lol
Are you suggesting that because private insurance isn't entirely free of economic decision making either--that somehow justifies forcing millions of Americans into a system where government bureaucrats make even more of their decisions for them?
People get more choices and better care when they're free to negotiate among competing private providers.
Entrepreneurs working to minimize the cost side of their balance sheets doesn't make health insurance different from any other industry competing for customers on quality and price.
doesn't make health insurance different from any other industry competing for customers on quality and price.
Therein lies your logic fail. For government medicare to break even, the payee must have an income of 250K during his lifetime. The idea that private insurers will ever make a profit on the elderly is a fantasy.
I'm not talking specifically about the elderly!
I'm not elderly.
The people who are being driven off the private insurance rolls and forced into some ObamaCare program aren't the elderly.
When ObamaCare actively penalizes companies that give their workers healthcare that's of too high quality? That's not punishing the elderly. That's working age people!
What does working people being subjected to federal regulation like Medicare and Medicaid--by way of ObamaCare--have to do with the elderly?
We're all supposed to effectively be stuck in Medicaid now?! No thanks.
It's average working age Americans who are getting the short end of the stick here from ObamaCare--it's not about the elderly.
Robert Samuelson observed yesterday that health care spending was 2.6% of GDP in 1965 and is 26.5% of GDP now. So, before Medicare, the health market provided care at a level and price that people could afford. Yes, yes, correlation != causation and all that, but it's pretty obvious that we are throwing fuel on the fire by "saving" more people from having to pay market prices for healthcare.
I honestly don't know what point rather is trying to make with her $250,000 schtick, but perhaps she can provide a link that translates her incoherent babbling into English. Regardless, unless we institute market reforms, healthcare costs will spiral out of control to the point where no welfare state health care will be feasible.
Ken Shultz,
My point is we cannot separate the elderly out of health care reform. Voucher solutions by Republicans are unrealistic, as well as community exchanges.
Health care needs to be rehabilitated from birth till death, and the focus on 'choice markets' is misleading
The worry, in other words, is that left to their own devices and with limited financial resources, individuals won't make good health care decisions. It's an easy charge to make, and it makes intuitive sense to a lot of people. After all, medicine life is incredibly, and increasingly, complex. Most people do need expert advice in order to inform their decision making.
FTFY.
If the 80-odd years from the New Deal to now has taught us anything, it is that showering the poor and elderly with welfare dollars will ensure that they make good decisions. Right?
http://www.marketwatch.com/sto.....2011-06-06
At least three out of every ten employers will stop offering healthcare once Obamacare kicks in. But remember, if you like your plan you can keep. I hope that lying worthless sack of shit dies a horrible death.
But his intentions are good, John.
...and isn't that what's really important?
Tell me more, John.
But I also think it's easy to underestimate how individuals will respond to the responsibility of making more of their own health care decisions.
Actually, I think the RAND Health Insurance Experiment suggests that they'd do just fine.
Most people make medical decisions out of ignorance. Medications come with prints out with details on their mechanism of action, side effects, ect. if you ask for it, but hardly anyone ever bothers to get a print out, much less read it. I support individual choice in healthcare, but I think we need to start developing a culture of individual responsibility for healthcare.
I support individual choice in healthcare, but I think we need to start developing a culture of individual responsibility for healthcare.
Moving toward any kind of single payer system-- even one as as 'mixed-mode' as Obamacare is-- moves us in exactly the opposite direction.
"I think we need to start developing a culture of individual responsibility for healthcare."
Hear, hear!
The worry, in other words, is that left to their own devices and with limited financial resources, individuals won't make good health care decisions.
Conversely, the question is whether the government will make better health care choices for them, in the long run.
Long-term experience with programs like Social Security. Not to mention corporate pension funds, have shown that collective entities exhibit no greater wisdom about such choices than individuals. There is as much pressure on the state or the corporation to spend now and put off difficult decisions as there is for individuals.
When it comes to health care, will the state have a strong incentive to make sure that individuals get proper preventive care? I don't see any reason why it would.
Healthcare isn't a commodity like a car or cabbage. In fact you want to avoid going back to the doctor, not seeking discounts on "more care". You just can't apply market concepts unless you create this amorphous concept of "care quality" and good luck to the random patient trying to figure that out. Even then, being sick is truly a random thing. You're lucky, or you're not. I'm not sure that prevention works that well at all. If it did, insurance companies would be saving money by getting their enrollees in these programs. This is all to say that healthcare needs to be seen as a common good, and we must spread the cost as far as we can across as many as people as we can. This means forcing enrollment in insurance or finding some other way to have every citizen pay his or her share. If you never get sick, and you had to pay for years, YOU WIN!
"Nor is there much culture or infrastructure devoted to providing patients with better information."
Bingo. I'd hazard a guess that a large portion of outpatient visits are focused on simply getting data/information/advice that the individual isn't able to find on his/her own. Even in the Internet age. Now obviously there is a need for doctors to be able to provide individualized diagnoses and recommendations. Unfortunately, due to the decline of primary care, since those doctors are often the same guys who perform very complex surgery, the price for that simple recommendation or even a simple surgery is inflated. I recently had to get some impacted earwax removed by a professional ENT -- all they had to do was just stick a mini-vacuum (undoubtely not FDA -approved for individual use, of course) in my ear and suck it out. Took about 2 minutes but I was charged $200 for it. Now was it really necessary for a licensed-up-the-wazoo med school graduate with 8 degrees to do such a simple procedure? Of course not, but heaven forbid we allow any of the plebians to take care of themselves.
thanks