White House, hospitals reach deal on health care
VP Joe Biden and Rich Umbdenstock
WASHINGTON – The nation's
hospitals will give up $155 billion in future Medicare and Medicaid payments to
help defray the cost of President Barack Obama's health care plan, a concession
the White House hopes will boost an overhaul effort that's hit a roadblock in
Congress.
Vice President Joe Biden
announced the deal at the White House on Wednesday, with administration
officials and hospital administrators at his side.
"Reform is coming. It is
on track; it is coming. We have tried for decades to fix a broken system, and
we have never, in my entire tenure in public life, been this close," Biden
said. And in a firm message to lawmakers, Biden added, "We must — and we will
— enact reform by the end of August."
Obama has set an ambitious
timetable for legislation, with the hope of signing a comprehensive bill in
October. But lawmakers returned Tuesday from their July 4 break with lots of
questions about the complex legislation and deep misgivings about key elements
under discussion.
Democratic senators in
particular are having second thoughts about a proposed new tax on generous
health insurance benefits provided by some employers. Without the tax —
Republicans favor it as a brake on cost increases — the prospects for a
bipartisan deal in the Senate appear to be in jeopardy.
Timing is critical because
lawmakers might be reluctant to vote on such a charged issue as health care
next year, when all House members and one-third of senators face elections.
"We're not there
yet," said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., who, as chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, has spent countless hours seeking a compromise with
Republican colleagues. "I'm trying the best I can to get there soon."
Another senator deeply
involved in the bipartisan negotiations said the proposed new tax on the
costliest employer-paid insurance benefits is quickly losing favor with
Democrats.
"It's clearly a very
difficult issue," said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., citing recent polls.
"You go to the public to ask them what they think and they don't like
it."
A compilation of surveys
reviewed by senators showed at least 59 percent of the public opposed to taxing
health care benefits to "pay for reform."
As a result, Conrad said,
"we're looking at other options" to help finance a bill whose price
tag is expected to reach $1 trillion or slightly more. Those other options may
be hard to sell to Republicans whose support Baucus has been cultivating.
Baucus has long championed a
tax on health benefits as the best way to pay for health care while
simultaneously restraining the growth of the cost of coverage in the future.
But the idea has drawn strong opposition from organized labor, a core
Democratic constituency. House Democrats have been highly resistant, too, and
Obama campaigned hard against it in last year's run for the White House.
The deal with the hospitals —
the one bright spot right now for Obama — may also be on shaky ground.
Officials said it's pegged to the Senate Finance Committee legislation that
Baucus is negotiating, and whose prospects are uncertain. It would follow
concessions from drug companies, and an announcement by Wal-Mart last week that
it would support an employer requirement to help pay for health care.
Of the $155 billion in
projected savings from hospitals, about $40 billion to $50 billion would come
from reducing federal payments hospitals receive for providing care to
uninsured and low-income patients, according to lobbyists. Those payments are
now made through the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The Medicaid cuts would be
apportioned by state, as 10 percent annual reductions beginning around 2015.
Officials of public hospitals
say they have concerns such reductions could also squeeze funding for trauma
centers and burn units, which receive Medicare and Medicaid money. But they
wanted to see the fine print.
Other savings of about $100
billion would come from slowing increases in planned Medicare payments to
hospitals. A small amount of savings would come from trimming the money
hospitals get for preventing patients from being readmitted for additional
care.
Hospitals would also get
something out of the deal. They won an agreement that if the Finance
Committee's legislation includes a public health insurance plan, it would
reimburse hospitals at above the rates Medicare and Medicaid pay, which
hospitals have long complained are insufficient.
The issue of a government
insurance plan to compete against private companies continued to inflame
sentiments on both sides of the political aisle. Republicans remain solidly
opposed. Democrats, citing polls that show the public is open to the idea, are
talking about a showdown on the issue.
Biden was joined at the
White House by Rich Umbdenstock, president of the
American Hospital Association, Richard Bracken, president of Hospital
Corporation of America, Wayne Smith, president of
Community Health Systems, and Sister Carol Keehan,
president of Catholic Health Association of the United States.
"We know how urgently
reform is needed, both for moral and economic purposes," said Keehan, who represents Catholic hospitals.
House Republican Leader John
Boehner of
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Associated Press writers David Espo, Erica Werner and Alan Fram contributed to this report.