States are not
waiting for Congress to reform Medicaid. Many are taking it upon
themselves, using existing options, to improve and bring stability
to their Medicaid programs. Two states have taken the lead in this
effort: Florida and South Carolina are pursuing federal waivers so
that they can bring the principles of choice, individual control,
and competition into Medicaid. Their experiences have the potential
to bring much needed change and innovation into the Medicaid
program.
Learning from the
successful state-based approach to welfare reform, Congress should
encourage states' efforts to reform Medicaid and provide broader
flexibility to states that seek to experiment with innovative
changes. More importantly, other states should recognize the
promising common features of Florida's and South Carolina's
proposals and use them as a basis for reform of their own Medicaid
programs.
The Case for
Change
In Florida, the
Medicaid program covers 2 million people. The cost of the program
has grown 13 percent per year, on average, over the past six years.
Twenty-four percent of the state's budget will fund the Medicaid
program in 2005. By 2015, Medicaid will consume nearly 60 percent
of the state's budget.
In South Carolina,
almost 20 percent of the population is on Medicaid, including 40
percent of children and 30 percent of seniors. About half of all
births in the state are paid for by Medicaid. Medicaid expenditures
are growing in every enrollee category. Nineteen percent of the
state's budget will fund Medicaid in 2005. By 2010, Medicaid is
expected to consume 24 percent of the state's budget.
These trends are
unsustainable. To hold down costs, states have traditionally used
techniques like cutting provider reimbursements, limiting access to
prescription drugs, scaling back benefit packages, and cutting
eligibility.
The existing
federal waiver process gives states the opportunity to move beyond
that sort of tinkering and test new policy concepts. Many states
have already received waivers for limited experiments. Florida and
South Carolina are now taking the next step: incorporating proven
free market strategies to stabilize and improve their Medicaid
programs over the long term.
The Principles for
Change
In the Florida and
South Carolina reform plans, three basic principles form a common
basis:
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Competition. The current Medicaid program relies on price
controls that are completely isolated from competitive market
forces. The states' proposals aim to inject a dose of competition
into Medicaid by encouraging private plans and networks to compete
for Medicaid enrollees. To attract enrollees, these plans will have
to design benefits packages that appeal to enrollees.
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Choice.
Today, enrollees depend on a Medicaid bureaucracy that
micro-manages and imposes arbitrary limitations that directly
impact and limit enrollees' access to care. Under the states'
innovative proposals, enrollees would select from a variety of
packages that are aimed at their individual health care needs. With
the proper informational tools and funding, enrollees will be able
to choose the plans that are best for them.
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Stability. One of the biggest problems facing state Medicaid
programs is the unsustainability of their current growth rates. A
contributing factor to this problem is the lack of predictability
in expenditures. In a traditional fee-for-service system, the state
pays for Medicaid services after services are performed. In
contrast, the Florida and South Carolina plans will provide annual
Medicaid contributions to individuals, and so the states will face
more predictable expenditures.
Similar features
can be found in the Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan (FEHBP).
Federal workers receive a defined contribution from the government
and are able to select from a menu of competing private plans.
Besides maintaining high satisfaction among participants, the FEHBP
has proven to be far superior to other government programs, such as
Medicare, the Veterans Administration's health system, and
Medicaid, in adapting to medical advancements and innovations.
Moreover, even with an aging population, the FEHBP
defined-contribution structure has outperformed private employer
based coverage in keeping down cost increases.
Key Steps for
Change
While the two
states' proposals differ in some ways, they also share several
similar features. These features are intended to spur competition,
give Medicaid enrollees choice, and bring fiscal stability to the
programs. Specifically, both plans are designed to:
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Establish a
fair and equitable financing system. Historically, Medicaid has
paid for services on a fee-for-service basis. This means providers
are paid after the service is delivered. Fee-for-service exposes
the program to fraud and abuse and does little to promote good care
management. Fee-for-service programs may be efficient
administrative payers, but they fall short in focusing on whether
enrollees are getting the care that is best for them.
Florida and South Carolina aim to fix this outdated system by
providing each enrollee with a defined contribution. With defined
contributions, the states will be able to adequately finance
enrollees' health care based on need, while making the budget more
predictable. Both states have developed processes to determine that
the size of defined contribution based on several criteria,
including health status. A disabled enrollee, for example, may
receive a larger contribution than a healthy child. In this way,
the defined contributions will better reflect individual
differences in service utilization and need.
Under both states' proposals, the enrollee will use the defined
contribution from the state to select and purchase the plan that
best serves his or her needs. If an enrollee is later diagnosed
with an illness, the plan would have to provide for the necessary
care, just as with other health insurance plans, and the state
could adjust enrollee allotment accordingly. Florida also divides
the premium, for administrative purposes, into comprehensive and
catastrophic care components to further tailor the contribution.
With this approach, enrollees would receive funding commensurate
with their needs and plans would face the proper incentives to take
on enrollees with chronic conditions because they will be
compensated accordingly.
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Enhance and
improve coverage options. Medicaid is notorious for promising
more than it can deliver. While, on paper, Medicaid services seem
to be very generous, the reality is far different. All too often,
Medicaid enrollees face direct rationing of access to care and
services imposed on them by the Medicaid bureaucracy.
In both Florida and South Carolina, enrollees would select from a
menu of competing state-approved options, such as managed care
plans, preferred provider organizations, and provider-based
networks. Alternatively, an enrollee could choose to use his or her
defined contribution to participate in coverage obtained through
the workplace. South Carolina also plans to allow certain
enrollees, qualified by the state, to choose a self-directed option
that would be similar to a Health Savings Account
arrangement.
Both proposals aim to give participating plans the flexibility to
design benefit packages that are tailored to meet individual
Medicaid enrollees' needs. Participating plans must meet the
states' standards in a variety of areas, including actuarial
equivalence. However, the specific combination of services in a
benefits package would be left up to the plan. For instance, a plan
wanting to focus on children's care could create a benefits package
that focuses on prevention, including immunizations and regular
check ups. A plan may want to focus on the needs of enrollees with
HIV; access to innovative drug therapies may be an important
feature of that benefits package. Instead of facing a
one-size-fits-all model with layers of blanket restrictions,
enrollees would be able to choose the benefits packages that best
suit their individual needs.
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Educate and
engage enrollees. There is little care management in today's
Medicaid program. Medicaid's combination of post-service payment
and one-size-fits-all benefits does not encourage individualized
care management.
Florida and South Carolina aim to make their Medicaid programs more
attentive to individual enrollees' comprehensive needs. To
accomplish this, both states will rely on enrollee education. Under
both proposals, enrollees would meet with counselors to help them
assess their needs and select the plan that is best suited for
them. After an enrollee chooses a plan, that plan has a strong
incentive to engage the enrollee in his or her health care. For
example, a plan that caters to diabetic enrollees could save money
by monitoring the enrollee's compliance with routine health
maintenance and may even provide assistance by, for example,
scheduling meetings with dieticians.
Both proposals would also create incentives to encourage enrollees
to focus on their health. In South Carolina, enrollees could use
any excess of their defined contributions to purchase additional
services. In Florida, the state will create accounts for enrollees,
who could earn contributions to those accounts for good health
practices, such as participating in a smoking cessation program. As
in South Carolina, these funds could be used to purchase additional
services. By engaging the enrollee at every level, these plans
create a greater incentive for the enrollee to be a more active
participant in his or her overall care and health.
Conclusion
As policymakers
concluded during the welfare reform revolution, state
experimentation is critical to fostering much-needed structural
change. The status quo in Medicaid is simply unsustainable for the
states and the federal government. By focusing on the principles of
competition, choice, and fiscal stability, Florida and South
Carolina aim to change the course of the program for the
better.
Congress should
provide broader flexibility to states while still ensuring that
clear benchmarks and performance measure are met. States, in turn,
should build on the concepts in the Florida and South Carolina
proposals and work to integrate market-based ideas into the
Medicaid program.
Nina
Owcharenko is Senior Policy Analyst in the Center for
Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.