By Robert M. Goldberg on 1.19.06 @ 12:08AM
The GOP should give the Medicare drug benefit a second look.
The mainstream media has been furiously writing the doomsday
scenario for Republicans regarding the new Medicare drug benefit.
The headline of a recent AP story, "Troubled Medicare Troubles GOP"
says it all. As they see it, or rather, as Democrats see it, since
there are no quotes from Republicans, Medicare is facing "system
wide failure" that "puts the health of our frailest citizens at
great risk" (Ted Kennedy). Senate Hillary Clinton has called the
program a "man-made disaster" on the scale of Hurricane Katrina.
And since tens of millions of seniors are at risk political experts
predict Republicans will face enormous electoral consequences.
Republicans can rest easy about the risk of retribution. There
is no systemic failure. On the contrary since January nearly 6.5
million seniors have been converted over from Medicaid to the
Medicare drug program. Another 15 million are receiving drug
coverage from Medicare's managed care plans or through a subsidy
that supplements their private company's retirement plan. And since
November, nearly 4 million seniors with no previous drug coverage
have signed up for the drug benefit. Out of that 25 million or so,
perhaps 30,000 seniors previously on Medicaid were inadvertently
dropped from their new Medicare coverage because of software
inconsistencies. That's hardly a systemwide or Katrina-esque
failure. Indeed, some might call it success
But not some Republicans who are inclined to use the headlines
as an excuse to regulate the Medicare drug benefit in the name of
cost containment or because they legislate in reaction to media or
liberal pressure. Predictably Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) will
reintroduce her proposal to use the Department of Veterans Affairs
price and use restrictions on prescription drugs to save money. The
greatest threat to Medicare in 2006 will come from Senate and House
Republicans who see regulating the drug and biotech companies as
political free throw in a close election race.
It's probably too much too ask, but Republicans might want to
learn something about how the Medicare drug program actually works
before they hit the town meetings which will likely be filled with
left-wing grannies bused in from seniors centers by the AFL-CIO and
Families USA.
In fact, the private companies providing the drug benefit are
treating people like real customers who are spending their own cash
instead of recipients. The Internet and medical informatics are
changing Medicare at a rapidly accelerating rate. People have more
real control over health and health care choices than ever before.
It's unlikely that when faced with giving up their customized
choices and great service in exchange for one-size-fits-all
government programs, Medicare consumers are going to want to give
back control.
Technology and market forces have transformed Medicare. Call it
the Medicare version of Ray Kurzweil's Law of Accelerating Returns
that technological change is exponential. To paraphrase Kurzweil,
because of its complexity, medicine has been slower than some other
fields to fully embrace the computer. But the creation of a market
for Medicare, along with the Internet and a broad array of advances
in computerized systems, is bound to improve all aspects of
medicine.
Under the new benefit program companies are providing seniors
with monthly statements of their medication use and drug spending.
They get tips about which benefit design is best, which drugs are
either less expensive or most effective in reducing total health
spending. Interestingly, these personalized efforts dilute the
efforts of direct to consumer ads to have an impact since people
now have hard data about how a drug works. Seniors will be able to
enroll in disease management programs that are customized to their
particular needs. For example, many drug benefit providers are
rolling out a program to help people manage or lose weight that
includes lifestyle coaching, screening for depression and
encouraging the right use of drugs in order to avoid diabetes.
Creating a similar program the government way would involve
Congress, bureaucrats, lawyers and lobbyists spending years hashing
out regulations to meet every objection.
Finally, the new technologically enhanced marketplace is light
years ahead of the turgid Medicare program in its ability to
evaluate new technologies and whether they reduce overall spending
and improve health. This stands in stark contrast to the Veterans
Affairs approach of rejecting most innovations on the basis of cost
or price alone.
If Senator Snowe wants a command and control approach to drug
cost she should set up a drug plan with the same prices, limited
selection, restrictive access, poor customer service and long waits
associated with the Veterans Affairs drug benefit and let it
compete with the other programs out there. That's real market
competition. That's the way the GOP should frame the Medicare issue
in 2006, Senator Snowe to the contrary.
topics:
Health Care, Hillary Clinton, Mainstream Media, Medicaid, Law, NATO, Medicare