The Dose - What We’re Talking About When We Talk About Medicare For All
Episode Date: November 1, 2019Many Americans are worried about how they will afford care if they get really sick, and policymakers are responding to this concern with a whole range of complicated policies. Are you confused about w...hat these policies mean for you, your family, and the health system in general? You’re not alone, so on this episode of The Dose, host Shanoor Seervai sits down with the Commonwealth Fund’s Sara Collins to break down what she learned in her latest survey on American’s views about health care. They discuss how Medicare for All, and other Democratic proposals, would change the health system; they also talk about open enrollment, an ongoing court case on the future of the Affordable Care Act, and much more. What do you think is the best way to fix our health care system? Send us an email on thedose@commonwealthfund.org.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund,
a foundation dedicated to affordable, high-quality health care for everyone.
In the Commonwealth Fund's most recent survey about health insurance coverage,
we asked adults about their views of a Medicare for All type approach
to expanding health insurance coverage,
specifically whether they'd favor or oppose eliminating all private insurance
and making public insurance like Medicare the only option for people to enroll in. And about
27% of people were in favor of it. Democrats were the most in favor. Republicans were among the most
strongly opposed. Hi, everyone. Welcome to The Dose. You just heard from Sarah Collins,
Vice President of Healthcare Coverage, Access, and Tracking at the Commonwealth Fund.
I asked Sarah to join me on the show today because everyone's talking about healthcare.
Many Americans are worried about how they will afford care if they get really sick,
and the Democratic presidential candidates are responding to this concern with a whole range of policies.
But these policies are complicated, so I asked Sarah to help me clear some things up based
on what some of her most recent research shows.
Sarah, welcome to the show.
Thank you.
So, it's interesting to know that many people would support a public plan, as you said.
But I was more intrigued by another finding in that same survey, which is that 40% of people said they just don't have enough information to decide whether or not they would opt for a public program instead of a private insurance system. So what does this tell us about the information gap when it comes
to health policy, about the reality of people on the ground, and then what political leaders are
talking about? So I think it reflects just how complex the healthcare system is. People often
not even understanding the basic dimensions of their own health plan.
People don't really interact with the health care system that much on a regular basis.
And so I think that that's what it reflects.
People don't know what a Medicare for All approach might mean for them,
might not mean for their neighbors and for the health system in general.
And I think that that's what this reflects.
We're in this situation where people are really worried about health care and what's going to
happen to the health system. In multiple polls, we see it again and again. It's coming out as
the number one issue that Americans are concerned about. But there's just not enough information
around it. Right. When we look at some of our survey data, we ask people whether
or not they're satisfied with their current health insurance plan. So people who have insurance and
people express pretty high satisfaction levels with their current plan. People in Medicaid,
particularly happy with their coverage, people in employer-based coverage. When we start asking
about the future though, that's when we see a drop off in satisfaction or just confidence that
they'll be able to afford health care in the future if they were to become very sick. And I
think a lot of that is driven by the fact that people see their deductibles going up every year.
We know that that's the big trend in private insurance coverage. So specifically now, if you
see your deductible going up, what that means is that if you get really sick, you were to sustain an accident or get injured
riding your bicycle or something, or a child get injured riding their bike, and you had to go to
the emergency room, then you might be subject to a pretty high out-of-pocket cost if you have a high
deductible. In fact, on an earlier survey, when we asked people in employer-based plans if they had
an unexpected $1,000 bill, so if they made a trip to the
emergency room or got real sick, only a third of people in employer-based plans said they'd have
the money to pay that bill off in one month. People just don't have the assets. They don't
have the reserves. They're walking around with health plans that can be a time bomb in terms of
what they might potentially be exposed to in terms of health care costs.
And so if you're sitting on a time bomb, you're going to be really anxious, right?
And let's talk about this anxiety.
We're recording this episode right before the open enrollment period begins for 2020.
So starting November 1st, people can buy insurance on the marketplace.
But how does this anxiety, this constant fear about cost
play out as people are trying to figure out what kind of coverage they should get?
Right. So open enrollment begins in just a couple weeks on November 1st. It extends to December
15th in most states, but some states have actually extended that. So it's really important if you're
uninsured right now or think you might not have insurance next year, or if your employer plan is not that affordable,
you might want to consider checking your options. Most people who are in the marketplaces,
most people who buy coverage in the individual market get a premium tax credit through the
Affordable Care Act that will help them afford their premiums. People who are just over the
threshold that makes them eligible for premiums, so people
earning about $48,000, $49,000 a year are exposed to the full premium. And that can be a big hit
for people. Even for bronze level plans, looking at just the premiums that people might pay,
it could well exceed 10% of your income and higher for gold level plans.
Can you explain what you mean when
you say gold level or bronze level? So plans offered in the individual market and the marketplaces
have to be offered at four different levels of cost sharing. So bronze level plans have the
greatest amount of cost sharing. They tend to be the cheapest plans, have the lowest premiums.
Silver plans, then gold plans, and then platinum plans. Each of those have gradually less
and less cost sharing, less and less lower and lower deductibles, and the premiums go up
accordingly. What we also see in some of our survey data is that a lot of people who are
uninsured and are considering going to the marketplaces or know that they might be eligible
for plans are hesitant to go because they're worried about how much it's going to the marketplaces or know that they might be eligible for plans,
are hesitant to go because they're worried about how much it's going to cost them.
So affordability is a major reason given by people about why they don't go to the marketplaces,
why they didn't choose a plan once they did go to the marketplaces,
and why they dropped a plan once they enrolled. It is also driven by the fact that we don't have a lot of outreach and advertising happening anymore from the federal government.
So the Trump administration has dialed back significantly how much money they're spending on letting people know about the open enrollment period,
that there are subsidies for people to help them buy their coverage.
So the affordability issue is partly a real issue for people, particularly as you go up the income scale and your premium tax credits get smaller, your out-of-pocket costs can go up.
Right. So those aren't the lowest income people, but they're people who are sort of on this cusp where they're not really making enough money to be able to afford to pay the full premium, but they're making too much money to get a tax credit.
That's right.
And so for those people in particular, but also for everyone, this is the first year
that there's no mandate that people have to have health insurance coverage.
Do you think that that's going to impact people's decision that they no longer have to pay a
penalty if they don't have health insurance. What we found in our survey, when we asked people without coverage
why they didn't enroll, if they didn't enroll in a plan because of the mandate, it's actually a
relatively small percentage of people. So about 11% of the overall population of people who don't
have health insurance coverage. So the mandate is important, but the affordability issue is much more important.
And so does this affordability issue, is it impacting the marketplaces in terms of
impacting insurers? Are insurers raising premiums because, say, healthy people are
choosing not to buy coverage and sick people are buying coverage?
Well, what we've seen in the last couple years
is a stabilizing marketplace in individual market. We see more insurers actually offering plans this
year. So more insurers coming into the market than actually leaving. So there is a general sense of a
very stable market. Over time, Congressional Budget Office is projecting that premiums will
rise at the rate of healthcare costs, just like they do in employer-based plans. So it's a market
that's affordability issues will reflect the other affordability trends in the group or the
big employer market where 150 million people get their health insurance coverage.
That's interesting. So what you're saying is that
regardless of whether you're buying insurance on the marketplace or whether you're getting it from
your employer, everyone is subject to the same concern about health care costs rising.
Right. So there are a couple caveats to that. The Commonwealth Fund measures has developed a measure of underinsurance,
which we define as people who are insured all year
but have high out-of-pocket costs and deductibles relative to their income.
So currently about 44 million people are underinsured.
And the biggest growth that we've seen in recent years is happening in employer-based plans.
And it's driven by this steady increase in the deductibles that people are exposed to.
In the individual market, people's deductibles or out-of-pocket costs tend to be higher on average than people in employer-based coverage.
But it differs by income. And this problem of underinsurance, and we can talk about some of the
other problems that we have with the healthcare system, including the fact that there are still
millions of people who don't have insurance. That's what the Democratic presidential candidates
are trying to fix, right? Whether it's with Medicare for all or something else.
So how are these proposals going to fix some of these problems? So between 27 and 30 million people currently lack health insurance coverage.
That's a big improvement since the Affordable Care Act went into effect in 2010.
But there are reasons for this.
Congress has not made any adjustments to the Affordable Care Act since it was passed in 2010.
That's very unusual for a piece of federal legislation. There are ways of addressing the out-of-pocket costs and the high premiums that
a lot of people are paying in the individual market. The other major driver of growth in the
uninsured is coming from the 17 states that haven't expanded eligibility for Medicaid yet. And just to clarify, those are really poor people who, if they lived in any other state,
they would be eligible for public coverage through Medicaid.
That's right. And so the law was designed to help the poorest people in the country
gain health insurance coverage because that's really where the biggest problems were.
People with lower incomes tend not
to have an offer of coverage through an employer. It is amazing that so many of the very poorest
people in the country are now without an affordable coverage option because of the fact that these
states haven't expanded. And so those are a large number of the people who are uninsured. And then who are the other people who are uninsured?
So a lot of people are not getting coverage because of the affordability issues that we talked about.
And about 11 million people are undocumented, which means they're not eligible for the subsidies that are offered through the marketplaces or Medicaid. And since we're recording this the day after the October
15th Democratic candidates debate, even though we're in the midst of an impeachment inquiry
right now, health care was still a big issue in the debate. And we had candidates pressing each
other. We had the moderators asking questions about health care. So what were candidates saying?
You know, all the candidates are in favor of getting the United States to universal coverage.
So getting everybody insured. That's pretty clear. Where they differ is in the path to getting there.
The proposals that are on the table
range from plans that build on the Affordable Care Act,
so that plans that build on the subsidies,
so do something for the people
that are living in these 17 states
that haven't expanded Medicaid.
Adding some kind of feature
like the individual mandate penalty, bringing that back,
or some kind of auto-enrollment mechanism to make sure that everybody gets into health insurance.
And then there are proposals that would use a very different approach, which is Medicare for All,
which is essentially a single-payer approach where everybody is enrolled in a public plan that looks like Medicare.
And those plans also can get to universal coverage.
So there's candidates like Vice President Biden, Mayor Buttigieg,
are proposing plans that build on the Affordable Care Act.
And Senator Sanders, Senator Warren are supporting plans that would use a Medicare for all approach.
Each of those approaches can move the country to universal coverage. We have new estimates out
from a Commonwealth Fund Urban Institute report that demonstrate that both building on the
Affordable Care Act and Medicare for all can move the country to universal coverage, so a place or near universal coverage.
The difference being in some of the proposals whether all undocumented immigrants are covered.
But both approaches do have the potential to move the country to universal coverage, improve affordability,
so get those premiums down both in plans that build on the Affordable Care Act, obviously down to zero and Medicare for all type approaches, and really reducing the amount of money that people have to pay out of pocket when they go to the doctor.
So where do these approaches differ then?
They really differ in terms of how the system would look and how the system would be financed. Right now,
healthcare is financed through a mix of spending by households. We all pay premiums,
out-of-pocket costs. Employers pay premiums for people in employer-based plans. And the federal
government spends a lot of money, both in the employer group market, obviously the private market through the premium tax credits, the Medicaid program. States contribute a lot of
money. So we have a mix of private and public financing. The plans that build on the Affordable
Care Act would largely retain that kind of financing mix. So everybody would be responsible
for contributing. In the case of a single-payer program or a Medicare-for-all type approach, most of the funding, the financing that's provided by employers, by households, by state governments would shift to the federal government.
So that's the major difference.
And this has been on my mind for a little while,
so I'm going to ask you to help me break it down. And now it's true that if there is a public plan,
a Medicare for All or some other public plan that covers everyone, the federal government
would be spending more money on health care. But at the moment, it's not that the money isn't being spent.
It is, but it's in the form of tax breaks to employers. So as I understand it, employers
pay for their employees to have health care, but neither the employers nor the employees are paying
tax on the premiums for health care and for buying
into this whole insurance system. So if things change and it wasn't this mix with private and
public money, the federal government would no longer be giving tax breaks to employers. And so
they could shift some of that money over to help pay for the
public plan. Is that correct? That's right. There are a lot of different ways to finance
the government's responsibility for health care in the instance of Medicare for All,
or even in some of the proposals that build on the Affordable Care Act. You could raise taxes,
you could move money around like you're suggesting. There are savings to be had, and you see this in the Urban Institute's estimates of the Medicare for All approaches.
There are fewer costs associated with providing health insurance through the Medicare for All approach and in the public option type approaches and the plans that build on the Affordable Care Act,
the major driver of health care costs in the United States right now are the prices that we pay to providers and commercial insurance.
When we talk about the cost issue, that is where a lot of people's costs are coming from in the system.
The Medicare for All would take that up to a very broad scale.
So all providers that are in the system would be paid closer to Medicare rate.
Another potential place for savings is how much we pay for drugs.
So there are both ways of financing this through cost savers, like I just mentioned, moving funding around,
like you just mentioned, in case of the employer tax break. And then also, at some point,
there will need to be a tax increase. If you're not paying through premiums anymore,
then some people, depending on how the taxes are distributed, may pay more in taxes than they're paying in premiums right now.
But some people, particularly people with lower incomes,
may actually see a net savings,
so pay a lot less in taxes than they do in premiums right now.
So just like we've been talking about this whole time,
health care is really complicated,
and it's not enough to just say,
oh, Medicare for all, it's going to make things more expensive.
There will be a very complex way that either a public plan approach or a different approach
to get to universal coverage would change the way that health care is financed and the
way things function.
That's right.
There are a lot of trade-offs to be considered, both in the way that we do this and how it
would be financed. So as we're wrapping up, Sarah, and since we're going into open enrollment, what's the
biggest concern on your mind? Well, I hope that everybody who knows that they're eligible for
marketplace subsidies and Medicaid do enroll, that people aren't afraid to go to the marketplaces and
check out their options.
People might really find out that they're eligible for coverage. The other risk that is looming on
the horizon is a current court case that was brought by plaintiffs in the state of Texas,
who claimed that as a result of the mandate penalty being zeroed out in the congressional tax bill in 2017,
as we mentioned earlier, it no longer applies anymore, and so some people are not getting coverage because of it.
But the plaintiffs claimed that the mandate is still in the Affordable Care Act
and is unconstitutional due to an earlier ruling by the Supreme Court. The plaintiff's case was upheld by a district court in December of last year.
That decision was appealed by several state attorneys generals,
and the oral arguments were in July.
We'll be hearing about that decision any day now.
If the appeals court upholds the lower court's decision,
then the Affordable Care Act would be deemed unconstitutional. And it is very likely that the
state attorneys general that are supporting the Affordable Care Act in the case and the House of
Representatives will appeal that
decision to the Supreme Court. So we could get a decision on this case sometime next year right in
the middle of the election season. But it is very concerning because declaring the law unconstitutional
would reach nearly every corner of the health system right now. The Affordable Care Act has
been in place since 2010, so it's heading to its 10-year anniversary. Every single aspect of the health care system would be affected by
a decision that deemed it unconstitutional. Obviously, millions of people would lose their
health insurance coverage. About 20 million people have gained coverage since the passage of the law.
More than 50 million people have pre-existing health conditions. If they
were to lose their employer-based coverage, would not be able to get coverage on the individual
market again, just like the days before the Affordable Care Act. So this chaos that you've
described, if ultimately the Supreme Court decides that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional. That's not going to happen in the short run, because regardless of what the appeals court decides, it is likely that the case
will then go further to the Supreme Court, right? Right. If the lower court decision was upheld,
it is very likely that it would be immediately appealed. There would be many reasons that the
decision would be stayed. It would just
be enormously disruptive if the decision were to take effect immediately. But the decision could
come next year. If and when the decision comes, 2020, what would this mean for the Democratic
presidential candidates? It would change the discussion significantly. If you think about
the plans that build on the Affordable Care Act, obviously that would change the discussion significantly if you think about the plans that build on the Affordable Care Act.
Obviously, that would change the base for those plans.
It might change the discussion around Medicare for All.
The Trump administration has decided that they are in support of the plaintiffs.
The Trump administration is siding with the plaintiffs.
So the Trump administration is essentially supporting the case that says the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional,
but they are not offering an alternative.
That's right.
Okay, so we've talked a lot, Sarah, about the chaos that we'll see
if the appeals court upholds the decision of the lower court.
But what will happen if the appeals court reverses the lower court's decision?
In that case, the Affordable Care Act would stand, so it would continue as usual. So the
question is what the Trump administration would do. Plaintiffs appeal the decision to the Supreme
Court, which means we'd be on a similar trajectory with the decision coming potentially in the middle
of next year. Or might they appeal it to the return to the appeals court for a full
discussion by everybody on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals? So they call this an en banc
decision. The idea of the decision coming in the middle of an election year might make the
administration pause over their strategy to appeal it directly to the Supreme Court.
All right. Well, this is something we should be watching for carefully.
This has been very helpful, Sarah. Thanks so much for joining me.
Thank you for having me.
The Dose is hosted by me, Shanwar Sirvai. Our sound engineer is Joshua Tallman. We produced this
show for the Commonwealth Fund with editorial support from Barry Scholl and design support
from Jen Wilson. Special thanks to our team at the Commonwealth Fund. Our theme music is Arizona
Moon by Blue Dot Sessions. Additional music by Pottington Bear. Our website is thedose.show.
There you'll find show notes and other resources.
That's it for The Dose. Thanks for listening.