Showing posts with label Perryman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perryman. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Achieving Equitable Cancer Care Access in Texas


Much is known about what influences the health of a community, including individual health behaviors as well as social and economic determinants of health.[1] Health equity has been defined to mean that everyone has a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible.[2] Being un- or under-insured puts people at serious disadvantage when it comes to access to healthcare and potential for positive health outcomes.

The Affordable Care Act (ACA, or Obamacare) provides an opportunity for states to expand health coverage to low-income families through the Medicaid program. Multiple recent analyses demonstrate that Medicaid expansion is having an especially positive impact in rural areas in expansion states.[3] Many expansion studies point to improvements across a wide range of measures of access to care.[4] Finally, research shows that Medicaid expansions result in reductions in uninsured hospital or other provider visits and uncompensated care costs, whereas providers in non-expansion states have experienced little or no decline in uninsured visits and uncompensated care.[5]

Texas is one of thirteen states that has chosen not to expand Medicaid. The majority of states not participating in Obamacare expansion are in the Deep South,[6] and these states are also the states in the lowest quintile in overall health as ranked by United Health Foundation.[7] (The State of Texas ranks 37th in overall health in the United States.[8])

That’s not to say the State of Texas doesn’t spend a lot of money on healthcare. According to the Comptroller’s office,[9] healthcare spending represents nearly half the state budget - $42.9 billion in fiscal 2015 – spread across various agencies. Seventy percent, or $30.3 billion, went to spending for Medicaid and CHIP. That spending also includes direct support of various institutions.

For example, the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, which markets itself heavily as “the nation’s top hospital for cancer care for 14 of the past 17 years”[10] and “one of the nation’s top two hospitals for cancer care every year since the [US News & World Report America’s Best Hospitals] survey began in 1990,”[11] has an operating budget of $5.2 billion and over 20,000 employees.[12] Of that $5.2 billion, 4% - $210.1 million – is general revenue appropriated by the State of Texas.[13]

As a radiation oncologist, I practice in the shadow of MD Anderson, even though I live 120 miles north of the Texas Medical Center. It is a long shadow. That shadow is often comforting, like an old friend. But it is a shadow that discriminates with strict financial barriers and selective insurance contracts. There is a joke in the medical community that the first and most important biopsy you get at MD Anderson is a wallet biopsy – no pay, no play.

MD Anderson does participate in the Texas Medicaid Program and has a financial assistance program for cancer patients who meet residency and certain financial eligibility requirements.[14] Uncompensated care in fiscal year 2018 at MD Anderson totaled only $170.4 million,[15] certainly less than the $210.1 million appropriated by the State of Texas and less than 3.3% of their operating budget. Modern Healthcare looked at the proportion of charity care provided by the country's 20 biggest not-for-profit hospitals and hospital systems by revenue in 2015 and 2016 and found that the average proportion of operating expenses devoted to charity care was 5.21%.[16]

In fiscal year 2017, MD Anderson provided care to a mere 420 people who primarily had no insurance and who met their financial assistance program requirements.[17] That is barely one unique patient a day at an institution that sees 141,600 patients a year.[18] MD Anderson’s first core value[19] is: “Caring: By our words and actions, we create a caring environment for everyone.” But not everyone gets in.

MD Anderson has a huge and wealthy donor base as well. As just one example, their Moon Shots Program,[20] launched in September 2012, has received $464 million in private philanthropic commitments so far.[21] In 2018 alone, 9.5% of their budget – $498 million – came from restricted grants and contracts and philanthropy.[22]

Let me say, I am in awe of the research that comes out of MD Anderson. They have every right to be proud of their #1 ranking and of having a Nobel Prize-winning scientist on staff.[23] The knowledge that comes out of an institution that sees 141,600 patients a year is staggering. The training of health care providers, including at Harris Health System facilities, is excellent. But I grieve when Texas residents who need the care MD Anderson can provide are prevented from going there.

Ultimately, quality health care is not just about rankings; it must be about access to care as well. As a state-supported institution, MD Anderson needs to loosen its requirements for providing uncompensated care and be willing to negotiate and accept reasonable contracts with insurance providers, especially Medicare Advantage and Obamacare plans. After all, a hospital cannot be “best” if it isn’t best for all. (That is not to let insurance providers off the hook. I have no doubt they shy away from contracting with MD Anderson, knowing less expensive care can be had elsewhere.)

The State of Texas should require minimum levels of charity care and insurance plan participation when hundreds of millions of state dollars are being allocated. State legislators, in view of the substantial economic[24] and health[25] benefits associated with the expansion of Medicaid, should invest in increased health insurance coverage in Texas via the Affordable Care Act. And finally, health care ranking organizations like US News & World Report should include access to care and charity care metrics when ranking hospitals.[26] These are the right – and equitable – things to do.



MD Anderson has a long tradition of providing quality cancer care for many low-income residents of Texas.

In FY17, MD Anderson provided care to 420 people who primarily had no third-party insurance and who qualified for partial or full financial assistance under MD Anderson’s patient financial assistance program. The estimated unreimbursed cost associated with these patients was $17.5 million.

In addition, MD Anderson provided care to 3,717 people whose primary source of insurance coverage was a state or locally sponsored governmental program such as Medicaid, CHIP, Harris County Hospital District or other Texas county-specific indigent program. The estimated unreimbursed cost associated with these patients was $12.5 million.

MD Anderson’s combined estimated unreimbursed costs for these two categories of patients in FY17 was $30 million.

For the past 23 years, MD Anderson also has provided cancer services at Lyndon B. Johnson General Hospital for low-income Harris County residents. This program is staffed by MD Anderson faculty physicians, nurses and others at an annual cost to MD Anderson of $4 million. The MD Anderson program at LBJ General Hospital more than 1,000 new patients and had more than 12,000 follow-up patient visits in FY13.
[18] https://www.mdanderson.org/documents/about-md-anderson/about-us/facts-and-history/quick-facts.pdf At MD Anderson, everything we do revolves around our patients. In Fiscal Year 2018, more than 141,600 people sought the superior care that has made MD Anderson so widely respected — 45,000 of whom were new patients.
[26] Why did U.S. News adjust for socioeconomic status? In 2014, the National Quality Forum, an influential standard-setting body, recommended considering socioeconomic status in certain evaluations of hospital performance. Since our objective is to enable a patient who is consulting our ratings to make apples-to-apples comparisons among hospitals, it follows that we should adjust for patient attributes such as age, sex and socioeconomic status. https://health.usnews.com/health-care/best-hospitals/articles/faq-how-and-why-we-rank-and-rate-hospitals accessed 7/4/19

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Money, Insurance, and Health: An Unfair Relationship

Money doesn't buy happiness, or so they say. But money can buy better health. Add one more difference between the haves and the have nots.

There are many determinants of health. Some behaviors are more under our individual control than others. The Big Three, as I like to call them – smoking, diet, and exercise – would, at first glance, seem to be entirely personal choices. That would be untrue.

Social and economic factors are a major determinant of health. These factors include education level, employment, income, family and social support, and community safety. Each of these factors is correlated with financial well-being. In fact, these social and economic factors as a whole are more important even than individual health behaviors, such as tobacco use, diet and exercise, alcohol and drug use, and sexual activity, since health behaviors also correlate strongly with educational level, employment, income, etc. In other words, we cannot address health behaviors in isolation; we must simultaneously address education, jobs, social services, and community safety if we are to improve health.

Another significant determinant of health – the one that gets the most national attention – is access to and quality of healthcare. In the United States, that access is governed primarily by insurance coverage. Every country rations healthcare; in the United States, we just happen to ration it by separating the insured from the uninsured, and that is very much along economic lines. A privileged few are wealthy enough to be able to pay out of pocket for whatever care they need, but they rarely need to. They have insurance. Good insurance. They can afford to pay their deductible, however high it may be. The working poor, however, have some income but little or no savings and often no health insurance coverage at all. They are the ones who get hit with the entire, undiscounted bill for their care. Bankruptcy is an all-too-common result.

Our healthcare system does make some patchwork provision for the truly indigent, but no one should kid themselves that charity care is in any way equivalent – either in breadth of coverage or ease of use – to what we want for ourselves. Even those with insurance are burdened with astronomical deductibles and copays that most simply can’t afford. These persistent financial burdens can force patients to choose less expensive procedures or to go without care altogether.

And then there is Obamacare.

Implementation of the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, started in 2010, when 16% of the US population – more than 40 million people – were uninsured. Healthcare provided since the advent of Obamacare is, as promised, both more affordable and more available. The percentage of people without health insurance has been cut in half.

The dirty little secret is that many healthcare providers don’t take Obamacare plans, funneling patients into inadequate primary care networks and forcing them to drive long distances for more specialized care. In other words, even under Obamacare we continue to ration care with money-related barriers. No question, Obamacare is far from perfect, but it is still better than nothing.

Ray Perryman, considered by many to be the Texas economist par excellence, issued a report in April 2019 titled Economic Benefits of Expanding Health Insurance Coverage in Texas. In this report, Dr. Perryman states, "Health care needs do not simply go away because individuals do not have insurance coverage. Instead, medical issues tend to escalate and lead to higher costs and worse outcomes. Texas would gain over $110 billion in new Federal health spending during the first 10 years." For the callous who are only interested in the economic benefit accrued to the state’s coffers, this report delivers that in spades.

Guess what, though? According to the Perryman Group report, expanding health insurance coverage in Texas also would result in enhanced “health and wellbeing of individuals directly affected by receiving coverage” as well as “reductions in the numbers of uninsured, fewer emergency room visits, improved health outcomes, enhanced employment and productivity, and other desirable developments.” That is a win-win, my friends.

There has been little political appetite to expanding coverage in Texas for fear of “socialized medicine” and an ever-more-intrusive Federal Government. I get it. We can have differences of opinion about whether and how much healthcare is a “right”, how much “responsibility” is required along the way, and the role of government in healthcare. But, leveraging $9.00 in federal resources for every $1.00 in state funding that results in improved health and return on investment is a bet I would make any day of the week.

Our individual and community health depends on many things. Money – or lack thereof – is the most insidious factor. Improving the health of an entire county, as measured by the Robert Wood Johnson County Health Rankings, will require a concerted effort on both the public and private sector fronts and with both large and small scale efforts. Expanding health insurance coverage in Texas via the Affordable Care Act would be an impactful place to start.