Tag Archives: insurance

Plunkett: Medicaid expansion is subsidizing sickness.


BY: B. Keith Plunkett @Keithplunkett
Let’s say you’ve been working just a few miles from home for the past several years. Your employer has allowed you to use a company truck to get you back and forth. So, you’ve budgeted your life accordingly. You’ve given your spouse the family vehicle to drive. You want her to have a dependable ride.

Due to the down economy and a bigger tax burden, your current employer decides to cut back the use of the company vehicle to “official use only”, then they cut your hours.

You’ve decided it’s time to move on. You got lucky, and found someone who offered you a job, but it’s a 30-minute drive from home, and no company vehicle.

There is a public transit system available to get you close enough to walk to your potential new job, but it leaves 15-minutes later than you need in order to get there on time. If you’re asked to work later than the normal working hours you may miss the afternoon transit entirely. Further adding to the dilemma is that the public transit is many times off schedule, and often routes and times change, meaning you will have to try and keep up with those changes daily in order to work out a way to get to and from work.

  • Do you opt for the “bird in the hand” and stay at the current job with less pay, and walk to work, maybe catch a ride?
  • Do you take the new job and try to go out and find the best deal you can on a used car with the hope that it will be dependable enough to get you to work, while hoping it won’t cost you money you need in order to put food on the table?
  • Do you take the new job and opt for public transit with the knowledge that the bus may not be there when you need it, and your frequent tardiness could eventually get you in ‘hot water’ with the new boss?

What do you do?

In many ways, this is the conundrum uninsured workers now face.

The form of transportation represents health insurance: employer provided, private insurance, and Medicaid Expansion. After all, transportation is basically insurance for being able to get where we need to be when we need to be there.

In our analogy, the problem with the company truck the employer is providing is that it only gets you so far, and as more regulations and taxes tighten the bottom line it becomes necessary for companies to cut it altogether, hoping you’ll find another ride. The problem with the privately purchased “vehicle” is that it may cost you too much for you to live at the level you are currently accustomed.

The final version of transportation in our story–public transit–is not dependable and many times causes a worse outcome than if you had just stuck it out with the first job.

Now imagine you’ve opted to go with public transit in our little analogy and you board the bus and find that it is already fully occupied with people. Where do you sit? What if tomorrow it is they who are late getting to the bus stop and it’s already full with you and an ‘expanded’ number of new riders?

Simple right? Add more buses. But, where do we get the money for that? Well, we increase taxes on more companies. Unfortunately, the added costs in taxes to these companies causes more cuts that add more riders to the bus.

What about drivers (doctors)? We have to pay the bus drivers. But, we have to keep costs down so we can’t pay them too much. Not paying market value in turn means we have a lesser pool of potential bus drivers willing to take the job. Should they accept the job of driving the bus, they are now being asked to drive longer hours and make more stops to cover the growing number of riders. AND, they are doing it for less pay.

See where we’re headed?

The wheels on the bus go round and round, but we’re stuck in an expanding and simultaneously deteriorating problem.

FIND MORE ARTICLES BY KEITH PLUNKETT HERE.

The old saying in government is that if you want more of something then subsidize it, if you want less of something then tax it. That is what we’re seeing with Medicaid expansion. The subsidy carrot is being dangled in front of states through Medicaid expansion to incentivize the herding of more people into a system that already fails to deliver healthy outcomes to those it currently serves. As that system founders under the weight of expansion, then more taxes will be necessary to fund the increasing size of the system, meaning less jobs, therefore more people in the system, and less coverage resulting in less healthy outcomes . . . . repeat, ad nauseum.

We are subsidizing sickness by government mandate.

Medicaid already underserves the people it is supposed to benefit, and that is before any expansion. Pushing more people into a system that, in many cases, provides worse health outcomes than for those that have no insurance at all is akin to poisoning through small doses.

To use another analogy, Mississippi Democrats are proposing pouring a bushel of fresh apples on top of a bushel of spoiled ones. We know what happens to the good apples in that scenario.

Think that’s too harsh? Consider the results of a study published in the Annals of Surgery in 2010.

The study examined outcomes for 893,658 individuals undergoing major surgical operations from 2003 to 2007. Patients were divided by the type of insurance they held—private, Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured—and adjusted the database in order to control for age, gender, income, geographic region, operation, and health conditions to allow for correction in differences. Three measurements of surgical outcome quality were examined: the rate of in-hospital mortality; average length of stay in the hospital (longer stays in the hospital are a marker of poorer outcomes); and total costs.

The results are depressing.

  • Medicaid patients were almost twice as likely to die as those with private insurance; their hospital stays were 42 percent longer and cost 26 percent more.
  • Compared with those WITHOUT health insurance, Medicaid patients were 13 percent more likely to die, stayed in the hospital for 50 percent longer, and cost 20 percent more.
  • The average length of stay in the hospital was 7.38 days for those with private insurance. Those with Medicare stayed 19 percent longer. Those with Medicaid stayed 42 percent longer.
  • The uninsured stayed 5 percent SHORTER.

Keep in mind, this is but one study. There are many, many more that show the same basic outcome; Medicaid is a death trap.

Anyone that says the uninsured deserve to be on Medicaid, deserves to have their head examined. If they do, they better hope they’re not on Medicaid when they have the examination performed. Studies show it might not end very well for them.

So what do we do?

The way to fix this problem is by first admitting that having 300,000 uninsured working poor in Mississippi is something that should be addressed. Unfortunately, we are hamstrung by a federal government that won’t take steps to innovate. There is little Mississippi can do to change that. It’s not like we have the money to fund new approaches to health care delivery. As it is we’re spending close to 40 times more in Mississippi on Medicaid than is spent on job creation.

If the federal government were willing to turn the Medicaid program into a block grant program to all 50 states, much like was done with Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) in 1996, then that opens the possibility of some serious innovation. It worked with AFDC.

Until that–or something like that–occurs, we are stuck with a top-down, one-size-fits-all approach that is literally killing off the indigent in our state and across the country. In the meantime, rejecting expansion of a system that kills in the name of health is the moral thing to do. Reauthorizing Medicaid at it’s current level is the only current option, but even that needs serious work.

About Keith: Keith Plunkett has worked on communications issues with a range of public officials from aldermen to Congressmen, and a variety of businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits. He serves or has served as a board member of several non-profit, civic and political organizations. Contact him by going to HorizonMediaMarketing.com or follow him on Twitter @Keithplunkett

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Filed under contributor, Democrats, Entitlements, Ethics, Federal Government, Governor, health, Insurance, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Obamacare, Opinion, Politics, Public Safety, Spending, State Government

PEP Talk Podcast: 12-17-12: Keith Plunkett and Commissioner Mike Chaney debate the Mississippi Health Insurance Exchange


DECEMBER 17,2012: A debate with Commissioner Mike Chaney over the Mississippi Health Insurance Exchange

BY: B. Keith Plunkett @Keithplunkett
12-17-12: For all that Mississippi Department of Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney says he knows about the implementation of the ObamaCare compliant Mississippi Health Insurance Exchange, there is still much that he admittedly doesn’t know since many regulations are still being written. But, according to the Commissioner, that’s okay. He’s not worried.

I’m sorry. But that just doesn’t give me a great deal of confidence.

I had the pleasure of getting to discuss the issue directly with Commissioner Chaney when he decided to call into The JT Show, a statewide radio show, and take me to task on a few things a week ago. In the end, Chaney’s explanations did nothing but leave me more confident than ever that this government-engineer-as-you-go health exchange is big government gone haywire.

LISTEN

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Filed under contributor, Entitlements, Federal Government, health, Insurance, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Medicaid, Mike Chaney, Mississippi, Obamacare, Opinion, Podcast, Politics, Republican, Spending, State Government

Mississippi Schools to get two rankings this year to compare old and new systems


Mississippi’s schools will receive a pair of rankings from the state this year.

For the past three years, the Mississippi Department of Education has ranked its districts and schools on a seven-tier scale with “Star” being the highest and “Failing” being the lowest. Those rankings are based on student performance on state tests and, in some cases, on graduation rates.

A new law requires the MDE to convert those levels into five letter grades – A, B, C, D and F – this fall. It allows for a simple conversion, with the bottom three tiers being labeled “F,” the middle tier being ranked “D” and the top three ranked “A,” “B” and “C,” respectively.

This fall, the MDE will release both sets of data, said Interim State Superintendent Lynn House. It will give school districts both their letter grade and what their ranking would have been under the former seven-tier system. That will allow better comparisons, she said.

via djournal.com – Schools to get two rankings.

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ObamaCare Regulations of State Health Insurance Exchanges: Commissioner Mike Chaney decides to deal with the devil.


BY: B. Keith Plunkett-@Keithplunkett

In previous articles I have written about the term “Illusion of Knowledge” and how that relates to ObamaCare and a host of other liberal utopian ideas. The basic premise of the utopian belief is that a central planning entity can somehow control the will of the individual for the betterment of the masses through complicated formulas and bureaucracy. The premise behind the “Illusion of Knowledge” is to use theory, formula and psychobabble to convince of grand schemes. Put the two together and what you get is big government programs that sound good, but accomplish little or nothing, sometimes resulting in solutions worse than the original problem.

At the heart of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, aka ObamaCare, is this utopian idealism.

Most Mississippi Republicans have rejected outright the concept of ObamaCare as a takeover of one sixth of our national economy, and because it is based on the assumption that a central government can better manage an individuals life choices. Enough said, right?

Apparently not.

It is a principled and idealistic stance that allows politicians to speak platitudes about personal freedom and personal responsibility, while getting a little squishier about the details.

Not only is ObamaCare a government takeover of individual freedom, it’s tentacles reach deep into state government and toss aside the tenth amendment with little concern for the long-term ramifications. The socialists among us have wanted government run healthcare for generations. These are people on a mission, and the utopian dream is within their grasp.

That is why it is especially troubling that Mississippi Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney is one of the “squishy” when it comes to the establishment of a State Health Insurance Exchange. The idea for a state exchange is itself a leap for the most hard core of individualists. But, for a Republican to go the extra length to work with an overzealous federal government and help bring about the widespread changes that will affect our most individual rights is a slap in the face.

The ObamaCare push for Health Insurance Exchanges eventually will lead to the single-Payer system liberals have always wanted. That is it in a nutshell. That is the slippery slope Commissioner Chaney finds himself on today. His stance, that if Mississippi doesn’t do it then the federal government will, is thin and flimsy and the public knows it. Chaney is merely doing Obama’s bidding. He may not believe that, but in the end the result is the same.

Chaney lobbied the legislature to allow him to go after federal money to establish the exchange, and it is Obama’s HHS rules that he is following to put it into affect. Why? So that the exchange will be ready for the full implementation of ObamaCare. No nuanced statement changes that fact.

ObamaCare eventually regulates private insurance and private business into the exchange or out of business. When that happens, we have a one-size-fit’s-all-single-payer-government-monopoly. The choice states have been given is to play by the federal government’s rules or be overrun.

Chaney has taken a path to appeasement. You can’t appease a monster. You must fight it with every ounce of strength you have, and every tool you can find.

Under pressure from conservative groups across the state, Chaney seemed to relent last week saying,

“we do not have to make any final decision until after the November election, at which time we can make an intelligent and informed decision.”

Hours after the story broke, Chaney released the following statement:

“I want to make it clear that my position regarding the Health Insurance Exchange has not changed.

We are not going to make any final decisions regarding the Exchange until after the Presidential and Congressional elections on November 6th. We will, however, continue to do those things toward the establishment of an Exchange that we must do to keep us in a position to make the best decision in November for all Mississippians. That is the only way to keep all of our available options open.

If we halt everything now, we will have prematurely surrendered Mississippi’s health insurance market to federal control. I took an oath of office to protect the interests of the people of Mississippi and that is what I intend to do.

I have and will continue to support a free-market solution to providing health insurance products to individual consumers and business owners in the State of Mississippi.”

Chaney “prematurely surrendered” to federal control the moment he instituted the program.  Despite the legislatures refusal to enact enabling legislation to implement the exchange, Chaney went after and accepted $22 million in federal start-up money.

He established his Health Insurance Exchange Advisory Board HERE, and went to Obama’s HHS looking for approval for the budget to implement the exchange portal HERE.

Chaney says he supports “a free-market solution to providing health insurance”. His actions show support for ObamaCare. Those are two opposite things.

About Keith: Keith Plunkett has worked on communications issues with a range of public officials from aldermen to Congressmen, and a variety of businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits. He serves or has served as a board member of several non-profit, civic and political organizations. Contact him by going to HorizonMediaMarketing.com or follow him on Twitter  @Keithplunkett

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Filed under contributor, Entitlements, Federal Government, Insurance, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Mike Chaney, Mississippi, Obamacare, Opinion, Politics, Republican, Spending, State Government

Under pressure, Chaney backs off of insurance exchange


Plans for Mississippi’s state-run insurance exchange now are on hold pending the results of November’s general election, according to Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney.

The decision is a complete turnaround from statements Chaney, a Republican, made Wednesday when he announced his intentions to continue work on the insurance exchange in spite of political pressure from Tea Party members and other conservatives to halt its progress.

“Presently, we are far enough along in creating a free-market exchange, without provisions of the Affordable Care Act, that we do not have to make any final decision until after the November election, at which time we can make an intelligent and informed decision,” read Chaney’s statement to The Clarion-Ledger on Thursday.

Opponents of the federal health care law have been putting pressure on leaders in several states to not move forward with health care exchanges in an effort to derail implementation of portions of it.

Chaney’s new stance on the insurance exchange plans – which would allow Mississippians to shop an online insurance marketplace for comparable rates and provisions – was met with praise by Republican Gov. Phil Bryant.

“The Governor appreciates the decision of (Chaney) to delay implementing a state health insurance exchange until after the November elections,” said spokesman Mick Bullock.

via Insurance exchange tabled | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com.

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Filed under Entitlements, Federal Government, Governor, Insurance, Mike Chaney, Mississippi, Obamacare, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, State Government

October trial set in Mississippi suit over health care law


State Seal of Mississippi.

State Seal of Mississippi. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

A federal judge in Mississippi has scheduled a trial for October in a lawsuit that claims the Obama Administration’s health care law is illegal, in part based on arguments that it violates individual privacy rights by forcing citizens to buy insurance.

The lawsuit was one of several filed around the country challenging the Affordable Care Act. The U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling last month that upheld most of the law, including the individual mandate that requires people to buy insurance or face a penalty. The justices said that portion of the law was legal because the penalty for failing to get insurance amounts to a tax.

The lawsuit in Mississippi claims the law violates individual privacy rights because it would force citizens to disclose medical information to insurance companies when they are forced to purchase policies. The government denies that.

The suit was filed by three Mississippi residents in April 2010. Gov. Phil Bryant, who was lieutenant governor at the time, later joined the lawsuit as a private citizen.

via Oct. trial set in Miss. suit over health care law | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com.

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SCOTUS ruling on Obamacare in plain English.


This from staff of the court:

In Plain English: The Affordable Care Act, including its individual mandate that virtually all Americans buy health insurance, is constitutional. There were not five votes to uphold it on the ground that Congress could use its power to regulate commerce between the states to require everyone to buy health insurance. However, five Justices agreed that the penalty that someone must pay if he refuses to buy insurance is a kind of tax that Congress can impose using its taxing power. That is all that matters. Because the mandate survives, the Court did not need to decide what other parts of the statute were constitutional, except for a provision that required states to comply with new eligibility requirements for Medicaid or risk losing their funding. On that question, the Court held that the provision is constitutional as long as states would only lose new funds if they didn’t comply with the new requirements, rather than all of their funding.

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Chaney faces 2 challengers in re-election bid for Miss. insurance commissioner


Louis Fondren, a Democrat from Gautier, and Barbara Dale Washer, the Reform Party candidate from Hattiesburg, seek to dislodge incumbent Mike Chaney as Mississippi insurance commissioner.

Chaney, 67, a Republican from Vicksburg, served in the State Legislature before being elected commissioner in 2007.

He says his accomplishments on the job are good reasons to keep him for another four years. His opponents say more can be done to keep insurance rates low enough.

Chaney counts among his achievements digitizing the department’s records, updating the agency’s website, recruiting 140 new insurance companies to the state, completing a nationally recognized $1 million hurricane wind mitigation study, helping create a $20 million grant-based mitigation program for Gulf Coast homeowners and giving back policyholders more than $11 million.

He also said under his leadership, the Insurance Department has recovered nearly $154 million related to jailed financial swindler Martin Frankel.

The insurance commissioner serves as state fire marshal, and in that capacity Chaney said his office has helped distribute more than 80,000 smoke alarms across the state and has become a national leader in arson arrests and convictions.

In addition, Chaney said much of his time is spent interpreting and enforcing a myriad of regulations coming from Washington.

“Keeping up with all that’s coming down is a difficult task,” he said. “Forty percent of our time has been spent on that the past three years. We’ve seen more changes during this time than I’ve seen in 30 years. And there’s more coming.”

Chaney said his focus remains on keeping insurance rates affordable, as well as preparing for health insurance reform.

via Chaney faces 2 challengers in re-election bid for Miss. insurance commissioner | The Republic.

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Car insurance State lags here, too


| The Clarion-Ledger | www.clarionledger.com: www.clarionledger.com/article/20110913/OPINION01/1…ome|s

According to USA TODAY, 13.8 percent of Americans are driving without liability insurance. But in Mississippi, where’s it’s mandatory by law, some 28 percent are flouting the law.

Of 22 states requiring insurance, it’s particularly bad here because the Legislature has failed to require proof of insurance when registering a vehicle, state Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney was quoted as saying.

This past session, House Bill 620 would have allowed tax assessors and tax collectors to deny car tags to motorists who aren’t insured.

But it died in the House after being so watered down as to be worthless.

When the 2000 Legislature OK’d the law, it looked tough. Those without an insurance card face up to a $1,000 fine and a 1-year driving suspension. But if it’s not enforced, it’s worthless, leaving law-abiding drivers in an accident to pick up the tab for those without liability coverage.

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Car insurance State lags here, too


| The Clarion-Ledger | www.clarionledger.com: www.clarionledger.com/article/20110913/OPINION01/1…ome|s

According to USA TODAY, 13.8 percent of Americans are driving without liability insurance. But in Mississippi, where’s it’s mandatory by law, some 28 percent are flouting the law.

Of 22 states requiring insurance, it’s particularly bad here because the Legislature has failed to require proof of insurance when registering a vehicle, state Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney was quoted as saying.

This past session, House Bill 620 would have allowed tax assessors and tax collectors to deny car tags to motorists who aren’t insured.

But it died in the House after being so watered down as to be worthless.

When the 2000 Legislature OK’d the law, it looked tough. Those without an insurance card face up to a $1,000 fine and a 1-year driving suspension. But if it’s not enforced, it’s worthless, leaving law-abiding drivers in an accident to pick up the tab for those without liability coverage.

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