Pursuing cost containment in a pluralistic payer environment: from the aftermath of Clinton's failure at health care reform to the Balanced Budget Act of 1997

Following a decade in which Medicare operated as the leading ‘change agent’ within the US health care system, the private sector rose to the fore in the mid 1990s. The failure of President Clinton's attempt at comprehensive, public sector-led reform left managed care as the solution for cost co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health economics, policy and law policy and law, 2006-07, Vol.1 (3), p.237-261
Hauptverfasser: Mayes, Rick, Hurley, Robert E.
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description Following a decade in which Medicare operated as the leading ‘change agent’ within the US health care system, the private sector rose to the fore in the mid 1990s. The failure of President Clinton's attempt at comprehensive, public sector-led reform left managed care as the solution for cost control. And for a period it worked, largely because managed care organizations were able to both squeeze payments to selective networks of medical providers and significantly reduce inpatient hospital stays. There was a lot of ‘fat’ in the nation's convoluted health care system that could be (and was) eliminated through competitive negotiations between medical providers and insurers, employers, or managed care organizations. One of our primary arguments in this article is that managed care operated partly as a systematic suppression of price discrimination or differential pricing (often referred to as ‘cost shifting’), as managed care organizations qua purchasing agents prevented hospitals and physicians from summarily raising prices to private payers to meet their financial requirements. Over time, however, managed care fell victim to inflated expectations, its own initial success, and larger fiscal forces. During this same period, Republicans and Democrats struggled to reach a consensus over the future direction of Medicare. Their disagreements contributed to the impasse over budget policy in 1995 and the infamous partial federal government shutdown. After President Clinton's reelection in 1996, partisan disagreements over Medicare dissipated. And, in 1997, Congress and the president passed the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, which emerged as a massive piece of patchwork legislation that sought to balance the federal budget, rein in Medicare spending, and increase the number of the programme's beneficiaries in private health plans.
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source MEDLINE; PAIS Index; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Cambridge Journals
subjects Beneficiaries
Budgets
Budgets - legislation & jurisprudence
Cost Control - legislation & jurisprudence
Cost shifting
Costs
Employers
Expenditures
Floods
Government programs
Health care
Health care policy
Health Care Reform - economics
Health Care Reform - legislation & jurisprudence
Health economics
Health insurance
Health Maintenance Organizations
Health policy
Hospital Costs - trends
Hospitals
Humans
Insurance premiums
Legislation
Medical technology
Medicare
Medicare Part C - economics
Older people
Political leadership
Political science
Politics
Presidents
Prices
Pricing
Private Sector
Prospective payment systems
Public health
Public sector
Reform
U.S.A
United States
title Pursuing cost containment in a pluralistic payer environment: from the aftermath of Clinton's failure at health care reform to the Balanced Budget Act of 1997
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