Missouri

Health Policy rankings 

Health indicatorsRank
Population5,651,796
Number of insurance mandates 39
Death rate per 100,000871.7
Percent of adults overweight or obese 62.40%
Percent of adults who have visited a dentist in the last 12 months64.00%
Number of births (2004) 77,765
 

Ranking public policyRank
Overall health ownership rank32
Government health care rank41
Private health insurance rank10
Medical tort rank43
Provider burden of regulation rank24
 Sources

*Policy ranks are from the U.S. Index of Health Ownership, published by the Pacific Research Institute.
*Health indicators are from
State Health Facts, a service of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
*Number of insurance mandates comes from
Health Insurance Mandates in the States 2007 (PDF), a publication of the Council for Affordable Health Insurance.

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Friday, July 11, 2008

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie... 

By Sarah Brodsky

Categories:  Missouri, North Carolina

… He’ll ask for a bakery license from the state.

The trend toward occupational licensure seems to be hard to resist, even for mavericks like mice … or midwives. Midwives in North Carolina, where practicing tocology is currently a misdemeanor, are asking the state to license them:

“If there was licensure in place, there would be more midwives trained here, and there would be a selection. No one’s going to move to a state that’s not friendly to midwives,” said Kreutzer, a member of the North Carolina Friends of Midwives.

It looks like North Carolina could be the next state to legalize midwifery, which would be great for the midwives who want to work there and patients who’d like to choose this option. But “friendly” and “legal” doesn’t have to mean “licensed by the state.” I hope North Carolina will follow Missouri’s lead and allow a private organization to certify the midwives. In fact, the ideal scenario would be several licensing organizations competing with each other.

If the North Carolina midwives want to increase their numbers, they should avoid state licensing. That tends to keep people out of the profession by creating lots of bureaucratic hurdles to jump over. It won’t bring new people in. (You don’t see geologists flocking to Missouri to be licensed here, do you?)

Monday, June 23, 2008

Enforce the Existing Laws First 

By Justin P. Hauke

Categories:  Missouri

A letter in the Springfield News-Leader urges Missouri's Congressional representatives to vote for the adoption of the Fairness in Nursing Home Arbitration Act, which would allow the families of nursing home residents to litigate disputes. This law would invalidate many of Missouri’s existing nursing home contracts which require families to sign a mandatory arbitration clause in order to insure them against a lawsuit in the case of an injury or death.

I’ve written an oped about nursing home regulations before. In that article, I argued that nursing home abuses are very much a reality, but that additional regulation will only make long-term care coverage worse. Saint Louis currently enjoys having the second-lowest nursing home costs in the country, averaging $42,877 annually. Nationally, the average annual figure is $65,200, with costs as high as $191,385 in some states. This is a tremendous bill to foot for 10 or 15 years of potential care.

It’s very obvious why nursing homes require an arbitration clause. They are charged with ensuring the safety of residents who often are suffering from dementia or Alzheimer’s and may be largely a danger to themselves. The costs of litigating every potential event (whether due to the home’s negligence or not) would be prohibitive, and would force many nursing homes out of business, only driving up the costs of long-term care.
This doesn’t mean that we should exonerate the negligent health care workers. Many nursing home contracts are already in violation of existing laws. We should concentrate first on enforcing the laws on the books before driving up costs to the industry with little guarantee of improvement in service.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Missouri Court Reporting 

By David Stokes

Categories:  Missouri

There are several recent articles in Missouri media that touch on the courts, which is particularly appropriate given the recent arguments I have had with some trial lawyer friends about the success (or failure) or tort reform in Missouri. (Here's a hint, it's been a success.)

First of all, Missourinet has an audio story about our recently released study of judicial selection (link via Mr. Combest). Check it out if you can. Next, the Washington Examiner has an article about tort reform success across America that mentions Missouri as an example. According to the article:

Since the reforms became law, the number of medical insurance companies in Texas increased from four to more than 30. Malpractice insurance premiums fell by as much as 31 percent.

This dovetails nicely with last month's Missouri articles discussing insurance premium reductions for doctors, which we blogged about here at SMI.

I think the facts are pretty clear. Our judicial selection system is a good one for our state, although I believe small improvements can still be made to it (our study focused on the big picture and admitted minor changes could be either helpful or harmful). I discussed some of those minor changes last year. Even more importantly though, the tort system had gotten out of whack, however we pick our judges with the "Missouri Plan." Our tort system -particularly the venue laws — needed some major changes, and they got them. Those changes have benefited our economy and our health care system. Now, unless some Law & Order twist happens in the next few seconds (like St. Luke's Hospital announcing they are moving to St. Clair County, Ill.), I declare this post closed.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

One-Size Health Care Doesn't Fit All 

By Sarah Brodsky

Categories:  Missouri

One of the downsides of paying for health care through insurance is that patients have less incentive to conserve scarce resources. For example, someone who pays for medicine with savings will consider carefully whether a prescription is really helpful, whereas someone who goes through insurance will be more likely to take whatever his or her doctor suggests. Relying on insurance can lead to wasteful health care spending; putting people in charge of their own health care resources leads to greater efficiency in the market for care.

This column by Mary Jo Feldstein in the Post-Dispatch makes the same point about the waste caused by insurance, but comes to a different conclusion from mine. Feldstein describes a study that found no benefits from living in areas where more intensive medical treatment takes place (more days in the hospital, more tests and procedures, etc.). St. Louis is one of the areas with more intensive treatment. Therefore, Feldstein writes, St. Louisans need an attitude adjustment:

Too frequently physicians see survival as the only good outcome and they try to push for every treatment, test and procedure no matter the likely outcome.

The latest thinking asks them to expand their definition of success to include a peaceful dying process. While Wennberg and Fisher's data shows change is needed in some areas, including St. Louis, shifting regional treatment patterns is not a complete solution. Their research should continue to inspire changes in medical education and physician payments. [...]

Understanding death as a natural phase of life is a cultural shift that will need to occur in the local medical community and the community at large.

In other words, because providing every procedure to every patient is wasteful, all patients need to give it up (the "cultural shift") and die graciously.

There's a middle ground between, on the one hand, insurance paying for every available treatment, and on the other, all patients foregoing treatment and resigning themselves to their ends. People could use HSAs to cover some medical tests and treatments, and they could decide for themselves which treatments will improve their lives. It's easy to say that too many tests are bad because a study found they didn't improve quality of life on average. But maybe there are a few people out there who would have greater peace of mind from the extra, "unnecessary" tests. Patients differ in their willingness to take risks and try new approaches. Rather than telling physicians to cut out the risky procedures, defining risk by a single standard for everyone, patients themselves could decide what level of risk is acceptable to them. And patients differ in their attitudes towards death, too — some accept it easily, while others would prefer to try any procedure that could prolong life. There's no need for everyone to come to a consensus; when people pay for care directly, they can vote with their feet.

We don't need everyone to shift one way, or take the same approach to medical treatment. We should change the way the system works so that patients can express their own preferences.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

For Wall Street Journal, Lightning Strikes Twice 

By Patrick Eckelkamp

Categories:  HSAs, etc., Insurance Regulation, Missouri

There are two editorials in last week's Wall Street Journal that discuss and highlight the proper solutions (read: abolish needless government regulations) to the worsening health care situation in the United States. Both editorials are spot-on in their assessments, and should be read by all those who are looking for a solution.

The first editorial focuses on the Florida legislature's unanimous passage of a health care reform bill during this last session. The bill was aimed at kicking the government out of our health care decisions, rather than trying to further regulate and manipulate the free market. Gov. Charlie Crist signed the bill in an effort to combat the notion that health care coverage has to be an all-or-nothing decision. Before this bill was signed, health care coverage plans were littered with state mandates and regulations that often drove up the price of the plan beyond the reach of average individuals. As the author points out, these erstwhile mandates included such "necessary" procedures as the age-old practice of acupuncture, not to mention chiropractic visits (I searched a long time for a clip from the Simpsons episode where Homer sort of becomes a chiropractor, but had no luck). All kidding aside, this is quite an accomplishment for those free-market advocates who think the government would only worsen the problem (jeez, who could think something like that!).

The second editorial also focuses on a bill that is working its way through the legislature in New Jersey (yeah, I know, New Jersey is ahead of Missouri — uh oh) that will allow residents to cross states borders to buy an affordable health care policy. By opening out-of-state markets, it allows competition to flood the New Jersey market, which can only benefit that state's consumers. Rather than being held hostage by existing health care companies in the state that are able to coordinate and charge higher premiums, consumers will be able to select from a number of approved health care providers (don't even get me started on what approved means, but that is a topic for a different day) throughout the United States.

Because New Jersey's average health care costs are almost double the national average, this bill should be welcomed with open arms. Nevertheless, opponents of the bill say policy buyers will only be able to get "bare bones" coverage. That is simply not true. Even if did happen to be true, it is not like policy holders would switch to a lesser plan than they originally had; this would simply allow those who had nothing before to have something.

Let's all hope this bill succeeds, and Missouri legislators take notice.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Health Care and Health Insurance 

By Sarah Brodsky

Categories:  Missouri

Check out this new website.  The Missouri Foundation for Health set it up to educate people about insurance coverage and collect ideas for policy solutions.

Giving people information about health care options is a great idea. And this website is easy to navigate, and has lots of information. Unfortunately, I don't think it will be as effective as it should be because it's more focused on insurance than on health care. The question we should be asking is: Can everyone pay for health care? (There are different ways to pay for care, like using a regular savings account, an HSA, catastrophic insurance coverage, traditional insurance, or some combination of the above.) Instead, this website asks, "Is everyone enrolled in a traditional insurance plan?" and then panics when the answer is no, without considering whether that kind of plan would be appropriate for everyone. Surely, we can all agree that a billionaire doesn't need traditional insurance to cover routine check-ups, even though he or she might want long-term care insurance or a designated savings account.

This feedback form offers a humorous illustration of the website's misplaced priorities. Along with basic information like your name, zip code, and email address, you're supposed to check off whether you are "insured" or "uninsured." But without detailed information about someone's financial and medical situation, a simple yes-or-no answer to to the "Are you insured?" question doesn't mean very much.

Monday, May 12, 2008

More on the Missouri Health Transformation Act 

By Justin P. Hauke

Categories:  Missouri

I wrote about the Missouri Health Transformation Act (MHTA) when it passed the Missouri Senate last week, so I thought I would revisit the bill now that it has reached a stalemate in the House.

The primary point of contention in the bill (and the reason it has grown to the behemoth size I lambasted before) is how to insure uninsured low-income Missourians. The House wants to control costs. The Senate doesn’t.

Essentially, House leaders believe that low income Missourians should receive “vouchers” to shop for coverage that meet their needs, rather than receive generic broad coverage by the state. I whole-heartedly agree. If consumers shop around for the best deal, prices will be lower for everyone. This is the real problem with the existing health insurance model. Do you have any idea how much a doctor visit costs? How much does it cost to get your teeth cleaned or to get your appendix out? Honestly, I couldn’t even ballpark these things. All anyone focuses on is their insurance deductible. So if it costs you $100 out of pocket to get your appendix out, do you even care what the true cost is?

The lack of medical price transparency has two negative effects. One, we overuse our insurance because we have no idea what the true costs are and the costs don’t accrue to us individually. And two, medical providers have no incentive to keep costs down if costs can’t be compared. Would you have any idea whether or not your doctor charges a “fair” price? Prices of various procedures could vary widely from doctor to doctor but we would have no idea because our copay would be the same regardless.

The House wants to cover the uninsured in a way that keeps costs lower. It wants insurance providers to encourage competition and to publicly disclose medical costs.

But, as the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch covers in an article in this morning's paper, hospitals, doctors, and other groups are balking at the request.

I’d probably be upset too if I knew that doing so would reveal that I’m charging three times as much as the next doctor to perform the same procedure. That would suck for me too.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Georgia on my Mind 

By Justin P. Hauke

Categories:  Georgia, Missouri

Yesterday, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue signed a comprehensive health care reform bill similar to Missouri's landmark HB 818 legislation, which passed last year. The Show-Me Institute has praised HB 818 on our blog over and over (and elsewhere), but it seems Georgia has one-upped even that innovative piece of legislation (extensive coverage can be found here).

The most significant improvement in Georgia’s health insurance reform bill is a provision which allows insurers to provide incentives for healthy behavior. For example, health insurance companies will be able to reward individuals for adopting “healthy behavior” such as quitting smoking or losing weight. This provision will go a long way in reducing long-term costs.

In addition, the law mimics HB 818 in making the premiums paid on Health Savings Account-eligible insurance plans 100 percent deductible against personal state income taxes. To encourage employers to participate (particularly small businesses), the bill also allows a $250 tax credit per employee for employers that offer HSAs.

The bill also improves upon earlier legislation in that it allows health insurance to be sold across state lines, rather than through the monopolistic cartels that currently exist. So Georgians now have the opportunity to purchase HSA plans provided by Missouri companies. The increase in competition will help improve quality while lowering premium costs.

It’s really refreshing to see positive health care legislation being passed around the country. Makes me less of a cynic.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

The Missouri Health Transformation Act of 2008: Everything and the Kitchen Sink 

By Justin P. Hauke

Categories:  Missouri

The Missouri Health Transformation Act of 2008 (SB1283), which would implement several state health care reforms, has passed the Missouri Senate and is now headed toward House approval.

This bill is a perfect example of bureaucracy at its finest. Considering the amount of administrative minutiae in this bill, I’d be surprised if anyone in the Senate other than the bill’s sponsor actually read it.

So what exactly will be “transformed” under the new bill? I’ve spent the better part of the past hour trying to figure that out. Apparently one “transformation” would be the creation of a new “Department of Redundancy Department,” which would consist of the existing members of the current state health care agencies. Apparently this new body is supposed to “coordinate health policy collaboration” across the state by issuing “official state recognition” to employers that promote “healthy workplaces.” The new cabinet also hopes to express its approval of “telehealth”—health advice provided over the phone.

But if that’s not enough, the bill would contain a litany of additional healthcare “fixes,” such as providing tax credits to private homeowners who modify their homes to be “accessible” (no description of what that means), providing a $400,000 grant to create a “website,” and a $350,000 grant “to be used for the establishment of a study to assess the feasibility of [health] pilot projects in the greater St. Charles area.”

I just don’t understand who this bill is supposed to appeal to. The provisions it would implement are mostly superficial or redundant. The one bright spot is the creation of a state income tax deduction equal to the premium paid by taxpayers for high deductible health care plans purchased through a health savings account. But that benefit seems superfluous when the bill simultaneously expands the Missouri Consolidated Health Care Plan coverage to include benefits such as marriage counseling at the taxpayer’s expense. Considering the degree to which MCHCP is currently underfunded (stay tuned for the future release of our study on Missouri public pensions), this seems like shooting yourself in the foot.

The only thing this bill might “transform” is a greater conviction that an expanded role for government management of health care would be a huge mistake.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Missouri Increases Medicaid Spending 

Dems say: "not enough!"

By Marc Kilmer

Categories:  Medicaid, Missouri

The Missouri House of Representatives passed a budget last week that significantly expands Medicaid spending:

the state's Medicaid expenses would rise by more than $300 million to greater than $6.7 billion, comprising roughly 30 percent of the state's total budget.

The budget includes more Medicaid money for nursing homes, a women's health care initiative, rate increases to participating doctors and dentists and a significant expansion of a pilot program that allows children to receive medical treatment while their applications for enrollment in the government health care program are pending.

Some Democrats, however, complain it's too stingy:

"It's just not enough. There's plenty more we could do," Rep. Kiki Curls, D-Kansas City, said in a refrain echoed by Democrats throughout a budget debate that spanned parts of three days.

From Rep. Curls statement that there is "plenty more we could do," it seems the Missouri budget is funded by the legislators themselves. I think Missouri taxpayers may take issue with that kind of thinking, though.

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