Wisconsin Recall Update and Other Stuff

Today the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board announced that six Republican state senators but no Democrats will face recall elections Republicans submitted petitions to recall three Democrats, but the Board said, in effect, that the signatures appeared to be hinky.
Greg Sargent

Dems have alleged that the signature gathering by Republicans is fraudulent, and now the board has explicitly claimed that their reason for not approving the recall elections against Dems is that the signatures “have raised numerous factual and legal issues which need to be investigated and analyzed.”

Translation: The fraud allegations just may have something to them.

The three Dems might still face recalls once the signatures have been thoroughly investigated. But, curiously, the funds requested to pay for the investigation have not yet been forthcoming from the Republican-dominated state Senate.

Tonight in Washington, House Republicans voted as a block against raising the debt ceiling without conditions. Dems split on the issue; Steny Hoyer advised his fellow Dems to vote no, also, and for the life of me I can’t understand why.

I can only assume that Hoyer is worried raising the debt ceiling will be unpopular. And it may well be; as I’ve said earlier, I don’t think most voters understand the issue. But they’ve got to do it eventually. By mid-August, to be precise. And I’m hearing that Republicans are privately telling Wall Street that they will raise the debt limit; don’t worry. See the BooMan for commentary. I’m tired.

Health Care Cost News

The most recent defense of the Paul Ryan Medicare-busting plan is that at least Republicans have a plan; Democrats don’t. In fact, there is a lot of Medicare reform written into the Affordable Care Act, although most of the reform hasn’t gone into effect yet. Beyond that, saving Medicare is going to require lowering health care costs overall while increasing revenues, preferably through economic growth. If those last two things are not done, busting Medicare will be the least of our problems, IMO.

The Obama Administration actually is doing stuff to get health care costs under control. This is interesting:

It’s getting personal now. In a shift still evolving, federal enforcers are targeting individual executives in health care fraud cases that used to be aimed at impersonal corporations.

The new tactic is raising the anxiety level — and risks — for corporate honchos at drug companies, medical device manufacturers, nursing home chains and other major health care enterprises that deal with Medicare and Medicaid.

In the past, such companies caught breaking the rules were required to pay fines. So the company would cut the government a check, and the cost of the fine got passed on to customers, and the executives lived to defraud another day. Think Rick Scott.

Now, on top of fines paid by a company, senior executives can face criminal charges even if they weren’t involved in the scheme but could have stopped it had they known. Furthermore, they can also be banned from doing business with government health programs, a career-ending consequence.

Works for me.

By some estimates, health care fraud costs taxpayers $60 billion a year, galling when Medicare faces insolvency.

We were talking about this in the comments recently.

Elsewhere — today the New York Times has a story about one Medicare cost-control plan that’s about to be implemented —

For the first time in its history, Medicare will soon track spending on millions of individual beneficiaries, reward hospitals that hold down costs and penalize those whose patients prove most expensive.

The administration plans to establish “Medicare spending per beneficiary” as a new measure of hospital performance, just like the mortality rate for heart attack patients and the infection rate for surgery patients.

The article doesn’t explain this clearly, I don’t think. The program will compare costs AND outcomes, so that hospitals won’t be rewarded just for being cheap. They will be rewarded for providing better outcomes at lower cost. Obviously, one point to this is to discourage medical facilities from over-treating patients so they can bill Medicare for more money. Over-treatment can be just as detrimental to outcomes as under-treatment.

However, the hospitals don’t like this part:

Hospitals could be held accountable not only for the cost of the care they provide, but also for the cost of services performed by doctors and other health care providers in the 90 days after a Medicare patient leaves the hospital.

I believe I understand why the Administration is doing this, although the article doesn’t explain it as well as it could be explained. I have been reading for a while that a bit items of “waste” in Medicare is the cost of re-admission to hospitals. According to a really klutzy powerpoint presentation by the Department of Health and Human Services, about 30 percent of Medicare patients who are released from hospitals have to be re-admitted within 30 days, and 75 percent of those re-admissions are preventable, and the cost of preventable re-admission comes to $12 billion a year in wasted Medicare money. So, that’s a lot.

In its state data center, the Commonwealth Fund estimates how much money each state’s Medicare program could save if re-admissions are reduced. Mississippi, for example, would save $24,016,832 every year if it could get its high readmission rate under control.

Causes of preventable re-admission include (a) the patient was discharged too soon; (b) the patient developed an infection or pneumonia after leaving the hospital; (c) the patient was discharged to another facility, such as a nursing home, that wasn’t able to care for him properly. The point is that hospitals shouldn’t just kick patients out without at least some communication and coordination with whoever is going to be taking care of them next.

In the article, one hospital administrator has a legitimate gripe, seems to me. He says this policy will be detrimental to inner-city hospitals serving larger numbers of immigrant and uninsured patients. Maybe the demographics of a hospital’s patients ought to be factored into this. But it really isn’t outrageous to penalize hospitals with higher than average re-admission rates, or whose patients need more treatment than other patients with the same conditions after discharge.

Update: See also Kevin Drum.