Wisconsin health care groups work with the feds on Obamacare
Trying to make up for time lost by Walker inaction
Erik Gunn on Thursday 12/13/2012
"No matter which option is chosen, Wisconsin taxpayers will not have meaningful control over the health care policies and services sold to Wisconsin residents," Walker explained when announcing his decision. "If the state option is chosen, however, Wisconsinites face risk from a federal mandate lacking long-term guaranteed funding."
Asked about the criticism, Health and Human Services spokeswoman Maril Alsup told Isthmus her agency would "prefer not to engage in an indirect debate," but said that it "will continue to work very hard to provide states with the greatest amount of flexibility in the establishment of their exchange."
Friedsam disputes Walker's contention that taxpayers would have little control if the state created its own exchange. "Many states do believe that there is an opportunity for them to tailor the exchange to their preferences," she says. But because of the state's hands-off policy, she adds, "there has not been any kind of public process" to discuss implementation in Wisconsin.
Eskrich agrees: "Other states have been working on this for more than six months now. Unfortunately Wisconsin was not proactive on this on the state level."
To fill the vacuum, several organizations teamed up to form the Wisconsin Access Network. The network is coordinated by four groups: the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health, the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families, the state chapter of the American Cancer Society and the Wisconsin Primary Health Care Association, which represents community health clinics around the state. Eskrich works with the network as a joint employee of both the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health.
Eskrich says that the state Office of the Commissioner of Insurance has taken part in Access Network meetings and that agency officials "were very open to working together" in negotiating with the federal government. OCI spokesman J.P. Wieske did not respond to two email inquiries for comment.
While health care activists had hoped for a state exchange, Eskrich says that once the federal one is operating, there may be an option for converting it to local control.
"I think in the future we still have a lot of potential to take it back in the state and take on more and more functions," she says. "I hope we recognize the opportunity there and take advantage of it."
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Trying to make up for time lost by Walker inaction
Erik Gunn on Thursday 12/13/2012
Eskrich: 'We are hitting a... turning point in implementation right now.'
Now comes the heavy lifting.
While
Gov. Scott Walker's administration continues to give Obamacare the cold
shoulder, groups outside of state government are stepping in to work
with federal officials implementing the law in Wisconsin.
"We are hitting a real pivotal
turning point in implementation right now," says Sara Eskrich, who works
for two advocacy groups that are part of the Wisconsin Access Network —
a loose affiliation of activists, providers and insurance carriers that
formed earlier this year to make sure their voices were heard as the
Affordable Care Act was put in place.
There's no time to waste, Eskrich and others say.
The
law requires virtually everyone by 2014 to have health insurance,
either through work, through a government program like Medicaid or
Medicare, or by purchasing a policy. For that reason, a statewide health
insurance marketplace — called a health insurance exchange — must be up
and running a year from now. The exchange will enable individuals
without employer-based coverage, as well as smaller employers with up to
100 workers, to shop for health benefit plans that the law's supporters
say will cost less than individual and small group policies typically
do now.
"It gives them the power they
don't have right now to purchase affordable insurance that covers their
needs," says Kenneth Munson, director of the federal Health and Human
Services Chicago regional office, which covers Wisconsin.
Because Walker last month
announced that the state would forgo the option of establishing
Wisconsin's health exchange, the federal government is taking on that
job directly. Munson says consumers would not notice a difference
between an exchange run by the state, the federal government or through a
state-federal partnership — a third option that was available to the
state.
But establishing the exchange is only one of three major tasks involved in putting the program in place.
In
order to ease the requirement that everyone purchase health insurance,
the law provides subsidies for those who can't afford the premiums and
expands Medicaid for low-income people. The state willultimately also have to decide whether it will agree to the Medicaid expansion in exchange for federal funding.
In addition, Wisconsin, like
every state, will have to settle on a standard for "Essential Health
Benefits" — that is, what every insurer must offer if it wants to be
included in the state exchange.
"This
is going to have an effect on what kinds of plans are provided in the
individual and small group insurance market in the state," says Donna
Friedsam, health policy programs director at the University of Wisconsin
Population Health Institute.
Although each is a separate
agenda item, says Eskrich, "we have to think of them as simultaneous
conversations working together to create full implementation of the
Affordable Care Act."
Meaningful control
Walker, like many other Republican governors, has always opposed the
federal health reform law and a year ago shut down all state activity
preparing for its implementation. When he dumped the job of setting up
an exchange on the federal government, he complained that either a
state-run exchange or the alternative of a state-federal partnership
would tie the state's hands while draining its wallet."No matter which option is chosen, Wisconsin taxpayers will not have meaningful control over the health care policies and services sold to Wisconsin residents," Walker explained when announcing his decision. "If the state option is chosen, however, Wisconsinites face risk from a federal mandate lacking long-term guaranteed funding."
Asked about the criticism, Health and Human Services spokeswoman Maril Alsup told Isthmus her agency would "prefer not to engage in an indirect debate," but said that it "will continue to work very hard to provide states with the greatest amount of flexibility in the establishment of their exchange."
Friedsam disputes Walker's contention that taxpayers would have little control if the state created its own exchange. "Many states do believe that there is an opportunity for them to tailor the exchange to their preferences," she says. But because of the state's hands-off policy, she adds, "there has not been any kind of public process" to discuss implementation in Wisconsin.
Eskrich agrees: "Other states have been working on this for more than six months now. Unfortunately Wisconsin was not proactive on this on the state level."
To fill the vacuum, several organizations teamed up to form the Wisconsin Access Network. The network is coordinated by four groups: the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health, the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families, the state chapter of the American Cancer Society and the Wisconsin Primary Health Care Association, which represents community health clinics around the state. Eskrich works with the network as a joint employee of both the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health.
Many more groups have taken part
in the network, she says, representing chronic-disease patients, other
health care providers, preventive care organizations, health insurance
carriers, Native American health centers and advocates for people with
disabilities.
The Access Network has had
discussions with officials from the Department of Health and Human
Services, including regional director Munson, who was a deputy director
for the Wisconsin Department of Health Services under Gov. Jim Doyle.
The network is currently
marshaling members to meet a Dec. 26 deadline for comments to the
federal government about the regulations governing the Essential Health
Benefits package.
Already, HHS has proposed (PDF)
as the state's "benchmark" plan the "Choice Plus Definity HSA" plan
from UnitedHealthcare Insurance Co., which includes a Health Savings
Account. UnitedHealthcare, part of UnitedHealth Services Corp., based in
Minnesota, has generally ranked as the largest health insurance
provider in Wisconsin in recent years, with about one-third of the
market.
To make sure the benchmark plan
is adequate, says Eskrich, "we're trying to look at it and figure out
where there needs to be supplementation."
Additional coverage
One
change that some in the Wisconsin Access Network would like to see is
the addition of coverage for habilitation, which is not included in the
benchmark plan.
Unlike rehabilitation — helping
people recover functions they have lost to an injury or illness —
habilitation means treatment to help people improve or maintain
functions that were below par to begin with. This could include, for
instance, therapy to improve motor skills for someone with cerebral
palsy.
"That's something that hasn't always been included in the private
insurance market," says Eskrich. If it becomes available under health
reform, advocates believe that people who qualify could be moved from
Medicaid to a traditional employer-based health plan, provided their
workplace has one.Eskrich says that the state Office of the Commissioner of Insurance has taken part in Access Network meetings and that agency officials "were very open to working together" in negotiating with the federal government. OCI spokesman J.P. Wieske did not respond to two email inquiries for comment.
While health care activists had hoped for a state exchange, Eskrich says that once the federal one is operating, there may be an option for converting it to local control.
"I think in the future we still have a lot of potential to take it back in the state and take on more and more functions," she says. "I hope we recognize the opportunity there and take advantage of it."
Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health
PO Box 1726 Madison, WI 53701
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