Health Politics

Health Wonk Review: SCOTUS edition

  • By
  • Justin Jones
July 2, 2012
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The health wonks have responded en masse to the Supreme Court's decision on the ACA.  Here are the links to this special edition of Health Wonk Review.

Part 1

Part 2

A Supreme Day - In Photos

  • By
  • Justin Jones
July 3, 2012

On Wednesday, June 27th my roommate convinced me that we should give up the comfort of our intern-housing beds for the cold hard concrete of justice and the company of other "Supreme nerds," waiting in line to witness the historic ruling on the ACA.  I'm usually not that compulsive, and I resisted at first. After some powerful persuasion, I eventually consented to go.  Interning here in DC this summer has presented me with many invaluable opportunities, but none has been as amazing as what awaited me next morning.  I owe my roommate a big "Thank you" for not succumbing to my stubbornness.

You could feel the excitement in the air.  Most of us were students or recent graduates, interns or nearby residents. Many didn't sleep that night, choosing instead to stay up night sharing opinions and speculations. Some finally succumbed to exhaustion.

We woke up in a sea of cameras. At 5:00 AM there were more camera crews set up than at 10:00am on Monday, when the Arizona case was released.  

As the morning wore on, I found myself constantly mulling over what might happen inside that beautiful building later that day. This would be among the most important, far-reaching cases of my lifetime.  

Politically I have always found a bit of both sides in myself.  With conservatives, I share concerns about the growing powers of government.  I was wary of the expansion of power that upholding the mandate would grant to Congress's interpretation of the Commerce Clause. (Yes--I was concerned about the broccoli argument.)

On the other hand, as I have learned more about the Affordable Care Act, it has become more and more appealing.  As a future physician I love the patient protections and expanded access that the health care law provides.  I also believe that sometimes the spirit of the law is more important than the letter of the law.

I hoped for a ruling that satisfied my views on both ends of the spectrum.  

While we waited inside I talked with a political science major from Johns Hopkins University.  When I asked her how she would respond to someone who believes that the ACA violates the Constitution she told me about her "Comparating Constitutions" class.  

"Under the United States Constitution, the government would not be violating its duty if it just sat back and did nothing," she said.  "Other countries' constitutions  have specific provisions written in them that forbid the government from doing nothing.  They have to provide certain services. Because of this, they are much more welcoming of big social changes like health care reform." When I asked if she advocates amending the constitution to have such duties she said, "Well, that's so long and difficult."

Her attitude surprised me.  In effect, she was saying, "Yeah, I realize there are limits in our Constitution, but they shouldn't get in the way of doing what society believes is right." 

Eventually we were shown upstairs to a room with small lockers where we were told to leave all electronic devices and other personal items.  From there we were directed to the courtroom where we waited and whispered for half an hour. Despite my profound lack of sleep, as soon as the Justices walked in a surge of adrenaline flooded my body.  No one but this relatively small group of people I was sitting with would ever witness these words uttered out of Justice Roberts's, Ginsburg's and Kennedy's mouths.  It was amazing to think that I was watching history before anyone else.  

The mandate was found unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause, but constitutional under the taxing power, and the rest of the law stood with it. (The Court did overturn the expansion of Medicaid as coercive, but the only part that was actually removed was the threat of removing all Medicaid funding for states that choose to opt out of the expansion.) I don't think there was a soul there who saw what was coming. As for me, I was elated! Upholding most of the ACA meant that meaningful health care reform would continue, and the check on the Commerce Clause abated my fears of growing Congressional power. Both of my concerns had been addressed.

I was surprised, however, by the "strike-the-whole-thing-down" position taken by the four justices who wrote the dissent.  As I see it, there are many parts of the ACA that are completely constitutional. The opinion of the dissenters seemed to be the mirror opposite of the opinion I had heard from the political science student just an hour earlier. According to the dissent's view of Congress's taxing and spending power, "the Court has long since expanded that beyond ... taxing and spending for those aspects of the general welfare that were within the Federal Government's enumerated powers." They cited "the Department of Education, the Department of Health and Human Services, [and] the Department of Housing and Urban Development" as "sizeable federal Departments devoted to subjects not mentioned among Congress' enumerated powers, and only marginally related to commerce."

In other words, they were saying, "Yeah, these agencies are solving pressing problems, but they extend beyond Congress's constitutional powers." Under similar logic, they argued that the whole Affordable Care Act should be struck down.

Picture:  Associated Press

After the Court finished the rulings, and the term, we were quickly ushered outside.  

Michelle Bachman was on a loudspeaker in the middle of the Tea Party crowd, insisting that since the justices had failed it now falls to the voters to repeal Obamacare.  She was drowned out, at times, by boos and chants of "Four more years" by people holding "we love Obamacare" and "stand up for women's health" signs.

 I stopped to ask a woman holding a "Protecting Our Care" sign what she thought about the ruling.  She was happy, of course, that the law had been upheld.  I followed up by asking her what she thought about Justice Roberts' ruling that the mandate doesn't stand under the Commerce Clause yet does stand under the taxing power.  She gave me a confused look and said, "I don't know what you're talking about."  Caught off guard, I awkwardly ended the conversation as I came to a profound realization:  most of these people here don't care about the specifics.  They're not here to find out how all the details play out.  

I would venture a guess that nearly everyone there that day would very comfortably identify themselves with one of two groups: those for limited government or for social justice.  In each group, as long as their ends are met, the details aren't important.  The limited government crowd wanted the law overturned--despite the fact that our health care system is on life support and millions don't have access to care.  The social justice crowd was elated by the ruling--regardless of its implications for the federal government's power.

In contrast to these groups, Court's job is only to determine whether the law in question is Constitutional--nothing more, nothing less.  As Justice Roberts put it, "we possess neither the expertise nor the prerogative to make policy judgments. Those decisions are entrusted to our Nation’s elected leaders, who can be thrown out of office if the people disagree with them." 

In that sense, it seems like this discussion--between two parties who care more about the ends than the means--is sort of out of place in front of the institution that is primarily concerned with the means. It was precisely the means, the details, that allowed me to feel like the day had been a win-win. By knowing the specifics of the law and the case against it, I felt like I was the only one reveling in a two-sided victory!

If the limited government crowd would have paid a little more attention to the details they may have found a silver lining in their defeat--the ruling on the Medicaid provision could end up being a major limit on federal power over the states, and some liberal bloggers have been complaining that the Court's ruling has "gutted the commerce clause."

Instead of examining the ruling, the groups were too busy volleying taglines. When this type of one way discussion takes place and people disregard the details, they tend to talk past each other.  The result is conflicting, often embarrasing, messages...

...like this:    

...or polls like this (CBS News/NY Times):  

And yet, while it might not always make sense, we have a long tradition of protesting in front of the Supreme Court.  I'm not suggesting that should end. Nor am I suggesting that we need to avoid the use of hyperbole to get one's point across.  Sometimes it can be entertaining.

But, are the two positions really irreconcilable? Can we fix the health care system and still keep limits on governmental power?  I believe we can, and I believe that is what we saw last Thursday.

Politics will continue to play on, speculations about Justice Roberts's reasoning will continue, but if we want to get things done we need to stop talking past each other, care enough to see what the other side has to offer, and build off our common ground.  

In the coming months and years, health care reform must continue. The ACA, though a good step forward, is far from a complete solution to the health care crisis. We have some tough questions ahead of us involving the quality and cost of care. Solving these problems will require our meaningful dialogue and thoughtful consideration of the details.

And by considering the details we may just discover, like I did, that solving problems doesn't have to be one-sided. We can find a middle-of-the-road solution that covers everyone's needs. That way, no one has to feel like they are "left out in the open."

The Supreme Court has Ruled on the ACA

  • By
  • Justin Jones
  • Joe Colucci
June 28, 2012
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After a tense last two weeks of the term, the Supreme Court has handed down its ruling for the cases challenging the Affordable Care Act (Florida v. Department of Health and Human Services, Dep't of Health and Human Services v. Florida, and National Federation of Independent Businesses v. Sebelius). The court voted 5-4 to uphold the entirety of the law, under a different justification than many people expected.  Here's the link to the opinion (majority opinion by Chief Justice Roberts; concurrence by Justice Ginsburg, dissent by Justice Kennedy):  http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-393c3a2.pdf. Please be patient if the opinion doesn't load right away--the Court's servers tend to get overwhelmed. The decision is also uploaded as an attachment on this post (on the right side of the page).

If you need a refresher on what the cases are about, here's our pre-oral argument summary, and our post-argument comments.

We're going to take our time reading the opinion, because we want to give you the our best analysis of what this means for the law, the health insurance and delivery system reforms already in progress, and the problems of unnecessary care and healthcare waste in general. We'll be back soon with our thoughts. In the meantime, follow us on Twitter (@NewHealthDialog) for immediate reactions!

A Market-based Case for the ACA

  • By
  • Justin Jones
June 20, 2012
Waiting for Robbo

The Supreme Court will soon pass down their decision on the most hotly-contested and highly influential policy decisions in recent years:  the Affordable Care Act (ACA).  As CNN has put it, this is "an issue that affects every American."  If fully implemented, the ACA is projected to extend coverage to millions of Americans—a huge victory for universal coverage advocates.  It has also received opposition from those who claim that it represents an unprecedented intrusion of government into the free market.  But free market lovers also have reasons to cross their fingers that the ACA will be upheld in its entirety.  Here's why:

1.  The ACA is market friendly: The ACA is among the most market driven universal health care proposals that has, to date, been tried in other universal health care systems around the world—beat only, perhaps, by the Swiss model.   Ezra Klein shares this view:  “I think conservatives would be smart to embrace the Affordable Care Act structure…giving private insurance a central role in those markets and leaving us with a health system that looks more like Switzerland than like Canada.”  

Many free market advocates point to the fact that our current insurance structure is the problem—patients are shielded from the costs of their medical care, so market forces don't play into their choices.  The ACA will, to some extent, level the playing field in that area.  The creation of state insurance exchanges, with minimum coverage requirements, demystify the health care shopping process, allowing patients to compare apples to apples and buy a plan based on the best value.  Unlike systems in other countries, where government officials negotiate prices, this will force insurance companies to compete for your business, pushing them to provide the best service at the cheapest price.  As Austin Frakt puts it, "That's, essentially, competitive bidding."   The ACA allows the private markets to stay in the game, increases competition, and buys us more time to tinker with free market solutions to escalating costs.

2.  Inaction will kill us:  Inaction—the very thing that the anti-ACA legal case claimed the government is trying to regulate—is the thing that will bring us down.  The rising cost of health care is unsustainable and represents, according to the bipartisan Social Security Advisory Board, "perhaps the most significant threat to the long-term economic security of workers and retirees."  If something isn't done, we will be spending one of every five dollars on health care by 2020.  Imagine the jobs that could be created if we weren't paying so much to the health care system!  (And no: more health care jobs are not always a good thing!)

Some sort of major health system reform is coming in the next decade or two, regardless of how the Supreme Court rules.  As a nation we will soon come to the point when we have to decide if we want to keep spending a fifth (or a fourth? a third?!) of our paychecks on health care. We can either willingly enter the realm of 21st century health insurance (like the rest of our industrialized buddies), or we can have our tattered economic carcass dragged there when our ever-burgeoning health care costs squash other economic activity.  Fast forward fifty years to when more than a third of our GDP--one third of all economic activity--goes to pay for health care.  At that point, public and market pressure will force the government to move to contain costs, and it's hard to imagine they'll do anything 'market friendly.'  Then will free market advocates look back, longingly, to a time when we could have had a health care system with maximum free market involvement?  

We are waiting with bated breath to see how the court will rule.  Regardless of what happens, one group will bemoan the end of the world and another will throw a party.  Free market advocates should think twice about where they would be most comfortable.

It's that time again!

  • By
  • Justin Jones
June 7, 2012
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Author and blogger Maggie Mahar is hosting this week. With posts about the upcoming SCOTUS decision, health care rights, obesity, and Medicare, there are plenty of opinions to go around. So sit back, relax, and enjoy this week's Health Wonk Review!

http://www.healthinsurance.org/blog/2012/06/07/health-wonk-review/

Issues:

Final Round: FIGHT!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 28, 2012
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Wow. Over six hours of argument later, we're left with... well, a little over six hours of audio. Now we get to wait for the decision--only 89 days to go! (The opinion will almost certainly be issued on the last day of the term, which is scheduled for Monday, June 25th.)

We haven't had a chance to listen to today's arguments yet, so without comment: this morning, in National Federation of Independent Businesses v. Sebelius, the Court considered whether the remainder of the Affordable Care Act can stand if the Court finds the individual mandate unconstitutional. This afternoon, again in Florida v. Department of Health and Human Services, the Court heard argument about the Medicaid expansion in the law--specifically, whether it amounts to an impermissible coercion of the states by the federal government. Remember, this one is incredibly important for the federal-state balance. The Supreme Court has never struck down spending as coercive before, and it would be shocking if they did now. See Aaron Carroll's piece over at JAMA if you're interested in more.

We'll be back with more blogging soon (and probably more commentary on the arguments), but in the meantime, check out the recordings! Happy listening.

Florida v. HHS, Round 2: FIGHT!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 28, 2012
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Day two of argument is posted!

Apologies for not managing to post this yesterday, but the oral argument audio from yesterday's consideration of the Miminum Coverage Provision (the individual mandate). Yesterday's Twittersphere consensus was that the argument went badly for Solicitor General Verrilli, and we have to agree--there were moments when he seemed to stumble over his arguments, and points that could have been made more clearly and forcefully. The case is far from over, though, and anything the Solicitor General missed in oral argument is surely covered in the government's briefs.

Go have a listen! Today's arguments are the last: this morning, and hour and a half on severability (whether the Court must strike down the whole law, if the individual mandate falls), and an hour this afternoon on whether the Medicaid expansion is coercive to the states. That last argument is incredibly important for the federal balance of power--Aaron Carroll has a good piece on it at the JAMA Forum blog--but it would be incredibly surprising if the Court decided to strike it down. We'll post audio this evening, when both sessions are out.

Florida v. HHS, Round 1: FIGHT!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 26, 2012
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We're holding off until after the whole oral argument is finished to comment, but there's no use making you wait: the audio is posted for Day 1 of Florida v. HHS, the Supreme Court case that will(?) decide the fate of the Affordable Care Act. Today's argument was actually about the question of whether the case could be brought at all: the suit might be prevented by the 1867 Tax Anti-Injunction Act, which basically prevents lawsuits to stop collection of taxes before those taxes actually take effect. If the Court decides that the Act applies, the whole case would be thrown out, and couldn't be decided until after the mandate goes into effect in 2014--meaning we might not have a ruling on its legality until 2016.

Enjoy the audio! We'll be back tomorrow for Round 2, the main event: the oral argument over the Minimum Coverage Position, aka the individual mandate.

Values and evidence: There's a difference.

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 12, 2012
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In her latest column at TIME Ideas, Shannon Brownlee takes on the controversy over the Obama administration's birth control rule, and links it to some of the other purportedly moral debates over the extent of health insurance coverage. The core point is that, while each person is entitled to his own opinion, we're not entitled to our own facts. In cases where the facts line up solidly against a treatment, as with some kinds of back surgery, PSA testing for prostate cancer, and other elective procedures, it makes sense to limit the extent to which taxpayers and other members of insurance pools have to subsidize care. In cases where moral beliefs are at issue, though, we have to be careful to respect differences:

...the medical issues that are now sparking debate have relatively little to do with the pure numbers or effectiveness. The controversy arises because people have different moral beliefs. In a pluralistic society, we should try to respect and even celebrate that. When it comes to decisions that are rooted in values, I don’t want anyone—be it the government, my employer, or somebody else’s religious leader—coming between me and my doctor.

And we're back, with Health Wonk Review!

  • By
  • Joe Colucci
March 1, 2012
Alistair Cookie

Apologies for our extended hiatus--we've been hard at work on an extended report, and it hasn't left a lot of time for blogging lately. But we're back, and hopefully we'll be blogging more often in the coming weeks.

Now, without further ado: this week's Health Wonk Review is up! Check it out.

Many thanks to Joe Padua at Managed Care Matters for hosting!

Join us again on March 14th, for the next exciting edition of Health Wonk Review!

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