Several Democratic presidential hopefuls are pitching a federal 鈥減ublic option鈥 as a way to expand health coverage and make it more affordable.
The details of their proposals vary, but is to create a government-sponsored plan that could compete with private insurance.
鈥淲e have a public option, just so folks know,鈥 California Gov. Gavin Newsom claimed last month as he unveiled his proposed 2020-21 state budget. 鈥淚t鈥檚 called Covered California.鈥
Hmm, really?
California does not have a public option in the way most people understand the term. According to 狈别飞蝉辞尘鈥檚 definition, offering a public option simply means ensuring that consumers have choices and affordable coverage, and that health plans are held accountable, things Covered California already does, his office said.
That鈥檚 a stretch, say some health care and political experts.
Covered California 鈥渋s manifestly not a public option,鈥 said Thad Kousser, chair of the political science department at the University of California-San Diego.
Kousser theorized that Newsom may be co-opting the term to make it seem like the state is making progress toward his goal of creating a single-payer system.
But if Newsom wants to flout the term, the state should 鈥渃reate a public option that doesn鈥檛 involve insurance companies, and Covered California is a market to buy insurance from insurance companies,鈥 Kousser said.
Covered California is the state-run exchange, created under the Affordable Care Act, where some individuals, families and small businesses can purchase insurance.
A public option is considered less sweeping than single-payer, a system in which health care is paid for by a single public authority. , Newsom, a Democrat, campaigned for the creation of a single-payer program.
But that isn鈥檛 likely to happen anytime soon, for a variety of reasons. For one, the Trump administration has said any state plans to use federal dollars to implement single-payer.
At the national level, Democratic presidential candidates including former Vice President and former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor have pitched public-option plans that would allow, but not require, people to buy into government-run plans similar to Medicare.
The idea is to boost competition by allowing people to choose between private plans and a government-run plan 鈥 and reduce costs.
Only one state, Washington, is implementing its own version of a public option, but other states are considering it.
, a hybrid system in which the state will contract with an insurer to administer a public-option plan, will debut in 2021. The state will attempt to control costs by setting payment rates at 160% of what Medicare would pay for the same service. is proposing a similar idea.
This version is different from the presidential candidates鈥 proposals because an insurance company will be responsible for running the public-option plan 鈥 not the government. But, ultimately, Washington will give its residents a new health insurance option, and that鈥檚 not the case in California, said Billy Wynne, chairman of the Wynne Health Group, which recently launched the , a group analyzing the implementation of public-option programs.
But in California鈥檚 defense, he said, what constitutes a public option 鈥渋s in the eye of the beholder.鈥
Peter Lee, executive director of Covered California, is also calling the exchange . He argues that public-option plans assume different forms, just like single-payer or Medicare for All proposals.
On the exchange, 鈥減lans don鈥檛 compete on their own terms; they compete on our terms,鈥 Lee said. 聽So, 鈥渋s a public option only a government plan, or is it a public program that sets the rules of how private plans compete?鈥
Linda Blumberg, a health policy fellow at the Urban Institute, hazards an answer: While Covered California actively negotiates with health plans to keep premiums down, it 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 quite have the spirit of a public option鈥 because it doesn鈥檛 bear the financial risk that insurance companies do.
狈别飞蝉辞尘鈥檚 , which is debating how to get every Californian covered 鈥 with an emphasis on single-payer 鈥 gathered in Sacramento last month for its inaugural meeting. The commissioners briefly discussed the possibility of implementing a public option as a steppingstone to achieving universal coverage.
But the concept didn鈥檛 get much love, and some commissioners suggested that instead of creating a public option, the state should strengthen existing public programs. One commissioner said the idea of a public option had already fizzled.
鈥淲hatever happened to Vanilla Ice, and whatever happened to Tiny Tim and Miss Vicki? Whatever happened to public option?鈥 asked Dr. Robert Ross, president of the California Endowment, a foundation that focuses on expanding health care access among Californians. 鈥淚t just kind of went away.鈥
The closest thing to a functioning public option in California, under the traditional definition, may be the L.A. Care Health Plan, a public, nonprofit insurer equally available to Los Angeles County residents with Medi-Cal, the state鈥檚 Medicaid program for low-income residents, and to those who earn too much to qualify for Medi-Cal.
John Baackes, the plan鈥檚 CEO, like the public-option plan described in the U.S. House version of the Affordable Care Act, before it was axed in the Senate. 鈥淭heir definition of the public option was a public entity that did not have shareholders that would compete with commercial insurers in the individual market,鈥 Baackes said.
L.A. Care, created to serve Medi-Cal patients, later opened to individuals and families who purchase their own insurance through Covered California or the open market.
For some time, Baackes said, the plan was the lowest-priced option in the Los Angeles area.
鈥淥ur enrollment skyrocketed because this is a very price-sensitive market, but in 2020, we were underbid by competition,鈥 Baackes said. 鈥淭o me, that鈥檚 exactly what the public option was supposed to do: put pressure in the marketplace. So I鈥檓 saying if you want to see how it works, look here.鈥
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