Nguyen: Put consumers in drivers’ seat of health care
In a recent development, Congress has managed to resolve its standoff over government funding, yet the underlying issue of renewing subsidies for insurance premiums under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) remains unaddressed. While Democrats continue to advocate for the extension of these subsidies, Republicans have proposed an alternative approach: directing payments into Americans’ health savings accounts (HSAs) or flexible spending accounts (FSAs). This proposal, although not fully realized, represents a significant shift from traditional top-down healthcare policies that have dominated American politics for decades. By allowing individuals the freedom to allocate funds towards their insurance premiums or directly on healthcare expenses, this plan aims to empower consumers and promote competition within the healthcare market.
The Republican proposal highlights a crucial need for a paradigm shift in how healthcare costs are managed in the United States. Currently, many Americans face inflated healthcare costs driven by a system that prioritizes bureaucratic control over patient autonomy. The ACA, Medicare, and Medicaid have often focused on short-term cost-cutting measures that stifle competition and innovation, resulting in a healthcare landscape where prices continue to soar. For instance, while the Biden administration has sought to negotiate price caps on prescription drugs, such efforts have not fundamentally addressed the systemic issues that lead to rising costs. The recent Republican initiative to enhance HSAs and FSAs could serve as a pivotal first step towards a more consumer-driven healthcare system, where patients can make informed choices and negotiate better prices with providers.
Moreover, this proposed shift towards empowering consumers could alleviate some of the burdens that healthcare professionals face, such as excessive compliance costs and administrative red tape. By enabling patients to retain unspent medical funds for future expenses and encouraging transparency in pricing, the government could foster a more competitive marketplace driven by consumer demand. This bottom-up approach not only promises to enhance access to healthcare but also addresses the critical issue of rising healthcare inflation. As Kim-Lien Nguyen, an associate professor of medicine at UCLA, argues, the time has come for policymakers to prioritize patient empowerment and innovation in healthcare. Embracing this new direction could ultimately lead to a more sustainable and affordable healthcare system for all Americans.
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Congress ended its impasse to reopen the government, but the Democrats’ reason for the shutdown remains unresolved: the renewal of expiring subsidies for insurance premiums under the Affordable Care Act.
Republicans offered an olive branch to end the standoff by proposing to make payments into Americans’ health savings accounts or flexible spending accounts. Although this idea was not realized, the proposal should not be forgotten as the parties work on compromises for long-term government appropriations.
The Republicans’ plan would allow individuals to choose between putting the money toward insurance premiums or spending it directly on health care. This offers a refreshing change from the top-down approach to health care that has dominated both political parties for generations.
Moving away from insurance subsidies and directing payments to taxpayers would serve as a first step toward empowering Americans to make their own health care choices and leverage their self-interest to contain health care costs. Americans would be incentivized to curb spending and would have the upper hand in bargaining for lower costs with providers. This approach offers a path for opening up access to health care while addressing the underlying problem plaguing our system: health care inflation.
When politicians talk about containing the escalating health care costs, they take a top-down approach that fails fundamentally to change the face of American health care. Just as the Biden administration negotiated for price caps on prescription drugs used by Medicare recipients, President Donald Trump recently negotiated a price drop for anti-obesity drugs. These gimmicks grabbed headlines but did little to address a persistent paradox: while health care costs vastly eclipse inflation, health care innovation has flattened.
The Affordable Care Act, Medicare and Medicaid suffer from similar flaws as top-down health reform initiatives that expand access at the cost of our system’s long-term viability. Their reimbursements have focused on short-term cost-cutting that ends up stifling competition, crippling innovation, and raising long-term costs. The Affordable Care Act’s cost-cutting centerpiece is higher government reimbursements for “coordinated care,” with the well-intended logic that economies of scale through integrated networks are the best way to expand access and cut short-term costs. This approach has “worked” inasmuch as reimbursement incentives have led small physician practices to merge en masse and prompted private equity to buy out freestanding medical centers. The result is regional oligopolies and closures of rural hospitals. For every dollar saved through consolidation, more is being spent on the endlessly growing compliance red-tape that buries doctors in paperwork and distracts them from patient care.
We don’t have to settle for a managed decline of our health care system. Both parties have said they want to make the Affordable Care Act “better.” The Republicans’ proposal of contributions to health savings accounts or flexible spending accounts would represent a first concrete step.
Hospitals often charge several times more for procedures when insurance or government reimbursement is used than when paid in cash. Those with annual HSA or FSA grants could pay the lower prices and contain health care costs. Instead of letting insurers dictate which procedures patients can and cannot access, the government would let patients take ownership over their health care.
The government can also motivate people to be good stewards by allowing them to retain unspent medical funds for future health expenses. By working through consumer advocacy groups to negotiate cash prices and by taking advantage of policies on pricing transparency, patients would have a personal stake in their health and be more informed consumers.
Empowering consumers may also incentivize the marketplace to innovate based on consumer demand and help hospital systems better discern which services are valued.
The past two generations of health care have been about gradual socialization of medicine, which has subordinated both patients and doctors to faceless bureaucrats and insurers. But the recent Republican proposal to direct supplemental payments to HSAs and FSAs, coupled with transparency requirements for health care costs, offer a way to put patients back in the driver’s seat. Our leaders would do well by empowering consumers to make health care choices and by embracing a bottom-up approach to cost management and innovation. This is the best pathway to making care both accessible and affordable.
Kim-Lien Nguyen is an associate professor of medicine at David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a practicing cardiologist./Tribune News Service