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In Maine, good intentions paved the road to health-care Hell

By: David Freddoso
Online Opinion Editor
07/13/09 3:40 PM EDT

A large part of the discussion on health care in Washington has revolved around the so-called public option – a government-run health insurance plan that would increase coverage and compete with private insurers to “keep them honest.”

President Obama has said he wants a public option. It is a key element in the health care reform plan presented recently by Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn.

But there's been surprisingly little discussion about the experiment that the State of Maine has conducted with a public option over the last five years. Before acting on health care reform, federal legislators would do well to look at a recently released paper by the Maine Heritage Policy Center. It describes what has happened in Maine – tskyrocketing premiums, decrease in quality of coverage, and failure to cut both costs and the number of uninsured.

In 2004, Maine's Dirigo Health reform plan began with $53 million and lots of good intentions. Among other reforms, leaders there hoped to cut the number of uninsured in the state by offering affordable, subsidized DirigoChoice insurance plans.

The theory was that this plan would insure so many more Mainers that it would end the phenomenon of “cost-shifting,” by which the cost of treating the uninsured is passed along to everyone else in the form of higher prices. Lawmakers were certain that Dirigo would create big savings for private insurers – so certain that they charged the private insurers an amount supposedly based on the expected savings to pay for Dirigo.

Over the next five years, Dirigo would collect premiums and dole out subsidies, for net revenues of $109 million. Taxpayers and insurers kicked in in $155 million more. As of May 2009, Maine had spent about $317 million on Dirigo, including the start-up money.

The result: About 3,400 previously uninsured Mainers are insured today with Dirigo. That's $93,000 for each newly insured person. The percentage of uninsured Mainers remains right where it was when Dirigo started: 10 percent. A large majority of those who switched to Dirigo – 64 percent – dropped their private insurance and switched to the subsidized “public option.”

Dirigo's enrollment numbers had never approached expectations, but they have plummeted recently because the program is no longer a good deal. The expected cost-reductions never materialized, so premiums had to be ratcheted up by 74 percent in five years. Individual and self-employed family plans under DirigoChoice now cost $1,500 per month, which in Maine looks more like a mortgage than an insurance payment. (Dirigo "temporarily" closed enrollment for subsidized plans and small business group plans two years ago. It's still closed.)

Dirigo's failure has been most damaging to the self-employed, the jobless, and to those who cannot get health insurance through work. Their only affordable options now are either to go without insurance or go on Medicaid, a free program that covers fully 23 percent of the state's population and is available to anyone who makes less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level ($46,000 for a family of four). That's because Maine's “guaranteed-issue” law, which forbids insurers from refusing policies based on individuals' health condition (that is, you can get lung cancer and only then apply), had already dried up the individual health insurance market. Esurance.com, the online portal for purchasing individual health insurance plans, doesn't even serve the state of Maine. Aside from the companies that manage large group employer plans, the only insurer is Anthem, which manages

Senator Dodd's plan includes both the “public option” and the “guaranteed issue” provisions. The lesson from Maine is that lower costs and savings do not necessarily follow from these policies -- in fact, there are good reasons to suspect they are counterproductive.

In Maine, good intentions paved the road to health-care Hell. President Obama and everyone in Congress should take careful note lest we all end up on that road.




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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Jul 30, 2009

The link you provided is from a conservative organization, hardly unbias.Maine also has one of the oldest states on average then the rest of the country. Why don't insurers want to com e to Maine? Because Maine asks them to play fair. If you don't think old age and one big insurer in a state had anything to do with skyrocketing costs then im not sure what to tell you.

If you look at most states who tried to do a public option you will find the health industrys lobbyists got their whacks at it and watered it down before the people ever saw it. Sounds familiar?

 

mainer

Jul 31, 2009

I live in Maine and have several family members who own small businesses. My parents are 60 and pay $1,200 per month for insurance. Dirigo is a joke and everyone knew it would be. They tried to prop it up with a soda tax last year and lost resoundingly. Why not have a high risk pool like car insurance? There are so many simple solutions. Maine's population is aging because young people can not afford to live here. The tax structure and environmental laws have driven out all forms of business (but we've still got plenty of trees). The draconian insurance laws drive out competition. The price of oil affects us dramatically due to long distances we must travel and the cold winters (and summers-love me some global warming). Basically every aspect of life where the government "helps" is a mess. We live here because we like to suffer and complain. For that pleasure we can thank our democrat state government and "moderate" senators.

 

ceanf

Nov 11, 2009

Why don't insurers want to come to Maine? Because it is not profitable to run a health insurance company in Maine, due to what they have done to their system. That much is obvious, thought those who support 'public options' when it comes to health insurance refuse to acknowledge it. But the facts show that every benefit claimed to come from Maine's public option plan has not materialized. Costs have skyrocketed, the number of uninsured remains the same and taxpayers are footing the bill. You can be sure of this... the same thing will happen nationally if BarryCare is forced on the American people.

If i am wrong, make your case against. Problem there is, there is no case to be had because current liberal health care ideas have never and will never work the way liberals think they will.

 

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