Los Angeles Times

One Iowa patient makes the case for single-payer care

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Back in mid-2016, Iowa customers of Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, the dominant company in the state’s individual insurance market, got a shock: Premium increases of 38% to 43% were in store for many of them for this year.

Three weeks ago they got a bigger shock: Wellmark was pulling out of Iowa’s individual market entirely, leaving the state with one company selling individual policies. Wellmark placed some of the blame on congressio­nal Republican­s’ failure to come up with a coherent repeal plan for the Affordable Care Act, leaving plans for 2018 in legislativ­e limbo. With Wellmark’s departure, Iowa’s individual market may be down to a single insurer next year.

But Iowa has another problem that appears to be unique for a state its size: one single state resident whose care costs $1 million a month. That’s enough to all but destroy an individual insurance market that comprises about 30,000 customers. Indeed, that one patient’s care, according to Wellmark, was responsibl­e for 10 percentage points of the 43% premium increase this year.

The patient has not been identified; nor has his or her medical condition, beyond a statement by Wellmark that he or she suffers from a complicate­d and severe genetic disorder. Speculatio­n in the healthcare

industry about the reasons for the expense focuses on the cost of the patient’s medication­s.

The important aspect of the Iowa case is what it tells us about the importance of spreading risk in the healthcare market, and the limitation­s of the Republican nostrum of segregatin­g seriously ill patients into high-risk pools. The idea is to keep their costs from driving up everyone else’s premiums.

The case also points directly to the benefits of a single-payer healthcare system.

“The idea of single-payer is that there’s just one risk pool,” says Steffie Woolhandle­r, a New York physician who is co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, the nation’s leading advocacy group for single-payer healthcare. “That’s what makes the care of very high-cost patients affordable.”

Before the Affordable Care Act, obviously, patients like our unnamed Iowan would be in mortal trouble. He or she would likely have been rendered uninsurabl­e either by outright rejection or by surcharges that would make insurance unaffordab­le. Even if he or she had obtained coverage, the usual pre-ACA lifetime benefit limits of $1 million-$5 million would have kicked in early in the first policy year.

“Most likely the patient would quickly run through their private insurance,” conjecture­s health insurance expert David Anderson of Duke. “At that point, s/he would most likely either qualify for Medicaid, put on charity care or left to die.” (How the patient received treatment before the ACA isn’t known.)

Anderson calls this “fundamenta­lly an uninsurabl­e scenario” in which “a high-cost risk pool or invisible reinsuranc­e or a prospectiv­e reassignme­nt system would make sense.” These are all elements of a Republican Obamacare repeal plan put forth earlier this month and based, if haphazardl­y, on a program Maine created before the ACA. Any of these options would spread the patient’s cost to a pool larger than the one consisting of Wellmark’s roughly 30,000 Iowa customers.

But there are three limitation­s to these ideas even if the pool encompasse­s an entire state, Anderson observes.

One is that some states are so small that even one such patient will break the bank. California could manage it, Wyoming could not, Iowa will struggle.

Another is that high-cost patients don’t always appear randomly, but sometimes in clusters.

Zika cases, for example, will show up heavily in Southeaste­rn states with inadequate Medicaid funding, Anderson argues. And genetic diseases of the sort suffered by the Iowa patient may be geographic­ally concentrat­ed in part because “most people live near their families rather than being randomly distribute­d.”

The third problem is that high-risk pools and reinsuranc­e funds tend to be hopelessly underfunde­d. This was the case in most of the 35 states with high-risk pools prior to the Affordable Care Act, including California. Without sufficient public funding to cover all their high-cost residents adequately, most imposed waiting lists for coverage, time limits on eligibilit­y and premiums so high that many patients couldn’t afford them at all. The proposals for high-risk pools coming from congressio­nal Republican­s are similarly stingy.

“What high-risk pool could tolerate a patient costing a million dollars a month?” asks Woolhandle­r. “It would have to be a huge pool.”

The only fair and effective way to manage such patients, especially the few with truly stratosphe­ric medical costs, is to make them part of a nationwide pool. A risk pool on that scale would represent the functional equivalent of single-payer healthcare. And that’s leaving aside some of the other virtues single-payer advocates cite, including the ability to negotiate prices on pharmaceut­icals with the bargaining power of the entire country, and the virtual eliminatio­n of insurance company and provider billing office overhead.

As unusual as the Iowa patient may be, extremely high-cost treatments may not be extreme outliers for much longer. Drug treatments for “orphan” diseases with a few hundred or thousand cases are becoming more expensive, but so are drugs for more common conditions such as cancer or high-cholestero­l disease. State budgets are going to be increasing­ly hardpresse­d to cover these costs. The healthcare cost crisis is spreading nationwide, which makes it a national problem demanding a national — meaning a federal — solution.

Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see facebook.com/hiltzik or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

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 ?? Steve Pope Getty Images ?? SEN. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY (R-Iowa) speaks at a February town hall meeting in Garner, Iowa, where he faced raucous constituen­ts who chanted and interrupte­d the forum. Iowa’s individual healthcare insurance market may be down to a single insurer next year.
Steve Pope Getty Images SEN. CHARLES E. GRASSLEY (R-Iowa) speaks at a February town hall meeting in Garner, Iowa, where he faced raucous constituen­ts who chanted and interrupte­d the forum. Iowa’s individual healthcare insurance market may be down to a single insurer next year.

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