Los Angeles Times

With healthcare, they think it’s time to go solo

Amid the fight over Obamacare, some California politician­s and advocates again promote idea of a state-run ‘single-payer’ system

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

With President Trump now vowing to put forward a replacemen­t for the Affordable Care Act in March, some California politician­s and healthcare advocates are once again promoting the idea of a staterun “single-payer” system that operates like Medicare.

Backers say the uncertaint­y surroundin­g Trump’s promise to repeal Obamacare presents California with a chance to rethink how healthcare is delivered to its 39 million residents.

“Why wouldn’t we take this as an opportunit­y to create what we want in California?” Dr. Mitch Katz, head of L.A. County’s health department, said at a conference in December. He mentioned a single-payer system as a possible solution.

Other suggestion­s for how California can capitalize on the threat to Obamacare include creating a public option, a state-run health plan to sell on the state’s insurance exchange, and mimicking how Massachuse­tts provided universal healthcare.

“Just as [healthcare] was a lightning rod and a rallying cry for opponents of the law for the past seven years, now it’s becoming a rallying cry for the supporters,” said Dr. Gerald Kominski, director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

State Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens) introduced a bill Friday that would make California the first state to adopt single-payer, also called “Medicare for all.” Canada has such a system.

In a single-payer system, residents would pay into a state agency that essentiall­y functions as an insurance company. The agency would pay doctors and hospitals when people sought treatment.

Previous proposals in California

suggested financing the agency by pooling the state’s current funding for Medicaid, Medicare and other health programs and then taxing employees 4% of their income and employers 7% of payroll.

“More than ever we know that universal healthcare is popular in the minds of California­ns,” Lara said in an interview.

Single-payer has a long, troubled history in California. Bills made it through the Legislatur­e in 2006 and 2008 only to be vetoed by then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger. But advocates say Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) increased support for singlepaye­r by championin­g it on the national stage last year while vying for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

New York state unveiled single-payer legislatio­n this month. Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) introduced a similar bill in Congress that would expand Medicare to cover all Americans.

But a 2008 report from California’s Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office found that even with a tax on California­ns and the state’s pooled healthcare funds, the state would still be short more than $40 billion in the first full year of single-payer implementa­tion.

“Where were they going to come up with the $40 billion?” said Micah Weinberg, president of the Economic Institute at the Bay Area Council. “It’s just not feasible to do as a state.”

Weinberg pointed out that a single-payer initiative was scrapped in a state as small and liberal as Vermont. A single-payer measure on Colorado’s November ballot also failed.

Even supporters tend to get nervous about singlepaye­r when they realize it would affect everyone and might be a step down from their current insurance plan, Kominski said. People who currently get insurance through employers, for example, would receive coverage through the state.

“I’m a skeptic,” Weinberg said. “For better or worse, we sort of need to see how things play out at the federal level and react appropriat­ely.”

California enrolled about 5 million people in healthcare because of the Affordable Care Act. Its uninsured rate reached a record low of 7.1% last year, according to data released this month.

The state would lose $20 billion if the Affordable Care Act were repealed with no replacemen­t. That’s an enormous, irreplacea­ble sum the state should concentrat­e on retaining, said Anthony Wright, executive director of advocacy group Health Access California.

“The first fight is this federal right, which threatens to undermine the entire health system,” he said. “I don’t want to presume that we’ve lost stuff that we haven’t lost yet.”

L.A. County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl was at the forefront of the state’s singlepaye­r effort when she was a state senator in the 2000s. She said she isn’t yet sure of the best way to back-fill cuts to the Affordable Care Act.

Kuehl and Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas introduced a motion Tuesday directing L.A. County officials to look into ways to offer medical care locally to people kicked off Obamacare, and to collaborat­e with the state on similar plans.

“We’re happy to work with the state to figure out a health insurance system, whatever that might be,” Kuehl said. “We have a lot of skin in the game.”

Kuehl said she thinks the state needs to consider replacing the $5 billion in Obamacare funds that subsidize Covered California plans. She said L.A. County is working to improve its hospitals and clinics in case it begins allowing people to buy into a local health plan and receive care from county doctors.

Michelle Klein-Hass, 53, is worried about losing her Medi-Cal coverage if Obamacare is repealed. She didn’t have to pay anything when she had emergency surgery to have her appendix removed. “It just about saved my life,” she said.

Klein-Hass, though, has supported a single-payer system since her mother was diagnosed with colon cancer two decades ago and was uninsured.

“They caught it real late, where they couldn’t do much of anything for her,” said Klein-Hass, who lives in Panorama City. “If we were living in a more civilized society, she would have had that found earlier.”

L.A. County’s Katz agrees single-payer would be optimal but thinks it could take too long to implement. That doesn’t mean the state can’t improve on Obamacare, he said.

If Congress repeals the Affordable Care Act, California could pass its own mandate requiring that everyone have insurance and that employers provide insurance. The state could go a step further, requiring that employers cover part-time workers, who are not included in the law’s employer mandate.

The state could also create a public option — its own health plan to sell on Covered California — that could be open to immigrants who are in the country illegally. They are barred from signing up for Obamacare under federal law. If the health plan is successful, it could one day morph into a single-payer system, Katz said.

“We’re going to need a California plan,” he said. “In four or eight years, or whatever it takes, maybe we’ve created the kind of system that other states will get.”

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? MICHELLE KLEIN-HASS worries about losing her Medi-Cal coverage if Obamacare is repealed. She also backs a single-payer system.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times MICHELLE KLEIN-HASS worries about losing her Medi-Cal coverage if Obamacare is repealed. She also backs a single-payer system.
 ?? Christina House For The Times ?? DR. MITCH KATZ, head of L.A. County’s health department, likes single-payer but thinks it could take too long to carry out.
Christina House For The Times DR. MITCH KATZ, head of L.A. County’s health department, likes single-payer but thinks it could take too long to carry out.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara has introduced a “Medicare for all” bill.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara has introduced a “Medicare for all” bill.

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