The
nation's governors and state policymakers can play a key role in
improving health care for millions of Americans. Although states
cannot fix the major problem encumbering health care--the federal
tax treatment of health insurance--they can test various ideas that
can lead to comprehensive national health reform.
Specifically, states can obtain relief
from the cumbersome rules and regulations that govern the huge
Medicaid program for the poor and indigent and initiate
comprehensive changes that will promote patient choice and expand
coverage to more children, adults, and families. They can do this
by taking advantage of a current provision in law called the
Medicaid Research and Demonstration Waiver, Section 1115 of the
Social Security Act.
States can apply for a five-year Section
1115 waiver from the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA).
After HCFA's Office of Research and Demonstrations grants this
waiver, states can try new reimbursement programs, change Medicaid
eligibility criteria to include new groups of patients, and even
contract with a greater variety of managed care entities within
their states. Except for some small restrictions, the only
requirement is that states first obtain HCFA approval for these
changes and agree to allow HCFA to conduct a formal evaluation of
the results.
This
evaluation process is an important feature of these waivers.
Without having to obtain prior approval from Congress, HCFA will be
able to study comprehensive reforms that are conducted in statewide
(non-national and medium-sized) markets. Comprehensive reforms
should be tested in markets that are large enough to yield
meaningful data on economic, social, and behavioral effects but
small enough not to cause irreparable harm to the economy, the
health care system, or patient care. This approach differs markedly
from that of the Clinton Adminstration, which was prepared to risk
one-sixth of the U.S. economy on an untried theory in 1993.
Statewide reforms could even include non-Medicaid populations.
This
is a winning situation for taxpayers and states alike. Testing
multiple reforms simultaneously in different states would allow the
HCFA to make better determinations about effective health care
programs. Using Section 1115 waivers, states can help to reduce the
numbers of uninsured, promote patient choice and competition among
providers and plans, and improve health care at the local
level.
WHAT SECTION 1115 WAIVERS OFFER
Section 1115 waivers allow state officials
to design and implement unique, comprehensive, and statewide health
plans for their populations. They usually cover a five-year period
and can be extended or renewed.
States are free to use almost any
eligibility criteria and reimbursement policies to cover children,
adults, and the uninsured. As mentioned above, they could offer new
or different services and new methods of reimbursement, change
Medicaid eligibility criteria to reach new groups, require
beneficiaries to stay enrolled in the same managed care plans for
longer periods, or contract with various managed care entities for
service. They also can supplement federal tax relief or vouchers
for low-income families to enable them to take advantage of private
health care options. Indeed, there is almost no limit to the types
of reforms state officials can design.
It
should be noted that these are not the only waivers available to
the states. HCFA also offers two other types:
-
Home and Community Based
Services
Section 1915(c)--Waivers, administered by the Office of
Long Term Care, provide relief from such regulatory requirements as
statewide application and comparability of services and provide
such services as home health care, respite care, and adult day
care.
-
Freedom of Choice
Section 1915(b)--Waivers, administered by the Office of
Managed Care, can waive the right of patients to select their own
providers, thus enabling them to be placed in a primary care case
management system.
However, neither of these two waivers can
be used to test comprehensive reforms; in addition, they
are limited in scope and targeted to certain types of
reforms.
Section 1115 waivers also were limited in
scope until 1982, when a Section 1115 waiver was approved for the
first time to demonstrate a comprehensive and statewide Medicaid
reform proposal in Arizona. At
the time, Arizona was the only state that did not have a Medicaid
program already in place. Because of its demographic makeup, it was
wary of immediately offering a long-term care benefit, which was
mandatory for any Medicaid system. By granting Arizona Section 1115
waiver authority, HCFA allowed state officials to provide health
care for classes of patients that otherwise would have been covered
by the conventional Medicaid program had it been in operation. This
waiver enabled Arizona to offer essentially acute care services
through a demonstration project known as the Arizona Health Care
Cost Containment System.
In
the 1990s, Section 1115 waivers have been used by various states to
enact mandatory managed care programs. In May 1999, the U.S.
General Accounting Office (GAO) reported that
Since the early 1990s 17 states have used
1115 Medicaid waivers to move their Medicaid programs closer to an
employer-based insurance model by implementing managed care for
targeted populations, deviating from the Medicaid benefit package,
imposing cost sharing on beneficiaries, and covering individuals
not traditionally eligible for Medicaid such as low-income single
adults.
HCFA
itself states that "with the new emphasis on State flexibility, a
rapid growth in the number of major demonstrations has occurred;
and a great deal of potentially fruitful Medicaid program
restructuring is being tested in this manner."
What
makes a Section 1115 waiver even more attractive to the states is
that it can apply to people other than those who are enrolled in
Medicaid. Although HCFA is reluctant to grant waivers early in a
proposed program's development, a Section 1115 waiver can be used
in conjunction with the state's Children's Health Insurance Program
(S-CHIP) to give children access
to private health plans, thereby serving as an alternative to
enrolling them in traditional Medicaid. The waiver can apply either
to the S-CHIP program alone or to a combined S-CHIP and Medicaid
program. Massachusetts, for example, has used a Section 1115 waiver
to extend coverage to non-Medicaid adults in families with children
through an employer buy-in.
HCFA also has reported that states are using Section 1115 waivers
for welfare reform projects.
In
what may be the most promising use of the Section 1115 waiver,
innovative state governments could develop consumer-based systems,
like the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, in which
low-income persons would be provided a broad choice of portable
private health plans and delivery options. Although no state has
attempted this type of reform, it could serve as a way to test
alternative comprehensive national reform proposals.
HOW SECTION 1115 WAIVERS WORK
For
governors and state officials who want to promote patient choice
and competition in health care at the state level, Section 1115
waivers have clear advantages:
-
Because congressional approval to
pursue an innovative health policy is not needed, the likelihood
that a proposed program will be gutted by opponents of patient
choice or market competition during the legislative process is
lessened.
-
States can adopt a specific health care
reform measure to their specific needs (for example, the needs of
their rural, urban, poor, or industrial populations).
-
The reform, administered by the state
with only minimal HCFA oversight, can be both comprehensive and
statewide.
-
The reform can establish unique
eligibility, coverage, and reimbursement rules to include
non-Medicaid populations like the working poor, children, and
uninsured without threatening existing Medicare, private pay, or
Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) interests.
-
The five-year waiver provides adequate
time to allow a program to mature while also providing an easier
way to discontinue or change the program (since technically this is
a time-limited, not permanent, demonstration) if it proves to be a
failure.
Limits of
Flexibility.
Although the Section 1115 waiver gives state officials almost
complete flexibility, there are a few things that HCFA cannot (or
will not) legally waive.
These include services for pregnant women and children; co-payment
and other cost sharing requirements for current categorically needy
eligible patients; federal matching Medicaid rates; requirements
for maintaining appropriate levels of access to quality care along
with quality assurance monitoring responsibilities; current
contract approval authority; and, of course, applicable ERISA
requirements. State officials may not want to waive such
limitations.
Additional limitations include the fact
that a health care reform proposal must be federally budget
neutral and waivers must be
renewed after five years. In any case, however, there is enough
flexibility in the program to allow for the creation of a
comprehensive statewide reform program that addresses a state's
most pressing health care concerns.
Possible
Roadblocks.
In the past, HCFA has been wary of granting statewide
comprehensive waivers when it believes that no real "research"
purpose would be fulfilled. In some cases, HCFA may determine that
a waiver project would interfere with its data collection and
analysis effort, which is essential to its function of central
planning and price regulation in the huge Medicare and the Medicaid
systems.
Governors also may run into opposition
from their state legislatures or bureaucracies. Before applying for
a Section 1115 waiver, they should be certain that dependable
personnel capable of implementing serious, market-oriented reforms
have been appointed. Otherwise, their reforms--no matter how
well-conceived and designed--may be stymied by well-entrenched
bureaucrats with an interest in resisting innovative approaches
that differ from traditional entitlements. This was the lesson of
Medicare&Choice at the federal level. Governors committed to
change should not overlook the powerful incentives that exist
within their own administrations and state legislatures to protect
the status quo.
CONCLUSION
At
the state level, most of the significant health care "reforms" have
imposed additional regulations on the health insurance market or
mandated benefits on private health plans. Instead of mainstreaming
low-income families into superior private health care options,
state officials have been content to expand Medicaid to include
low-income families. But there is nothing innovative about
expanding Medicaid or adding another layer of regulation to an
already overly regulated health care system.
The
main focus of health care reform should be changing the federal tax
treatment of health insurance to promote patient choice and
competition. Until such a reform is adopted at the federal level,
however, imaginative governors should take advantage of the Section
1115 waiver authority available in the Medicaid program to improve
health care across their states. With such authority, they can
advance consumer choice and competition so that low-income families
have access to quality health care; supplement federal tax relief
or vouchers for the uninsured; and expand health care options for
children.
Just
as Governor Tommy Thompson initiated serious changes in Wisconsin's
welfare program that became a national model for the successful
federal welfare reform initiative of 1996, governors can use
Section 1115 waivers to initiate changes in the provision of health
care that could have a dramatic impact outside their states.
Instead of assuming a passive role in the health care debate,
governors should make use of these waivers to bring about
significant improvements in today's overly bureaucratic system for
millions of patients and their families.
Richard Teske is a health care policy
consultant based in Arlington, Virginia. He served as Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs at the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services during the Reagan
Administration.