[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 175 (Wednesday, November 16, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7608-S7610]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I am not going to speak very long
tonight, and I am not going to speak very formally either. But I did
want to come back to the Senate floor and make a point again that I
have made repeatedly here on the Senate floor before; that is, there is
a path to reform of our health care system that will improve the
quality of care for patients, will improve the experience of care for
patients, will improve the outcomes of care for patients and for our
Nation, and will lower costs for our country.
The reason I come to raise that point again is that the Senate is now
awash with rumors that the 12 Members of Congress--Senators and
Congressmen--who have been tasked with trying to create a solution to
our deficit problem are going to cut Medicare benefits by hundreds of
millions of dollars. That is, as best I can tell, only a rumor. I
certainly cannot vouch for it being true. Indeed, I hope it is not
true.
The time I wish to spend this evening is to remind my colleagues it
is a very unfortunate and mistaken path to take to follow the road of
benefit cuts at a time when the road to reform is so promising in terms
of the win-win of better care at lower cost.
It is not just me saying this. The President's Council of Economic
Advisers has said the annual savings that could be accomplished with
health care delivery system reform, without reducing anybody's quality
of care or access to care--indeed, I would hypothesize actually
improving quality of care--is $700 billion a year in the American
health care system.
The President's Council of Economic Advisers is not alone in that
opinion. The Institute of Medicine has just said it is around $770
billion a year. A few years back, the New England Healthcare Institute
said it was $850 billion a year. And the Lewin Group, which is a fairly
well respected health care consultancy here in Washington, as well as
George Bush's Treasury Secretary, Secretary O'Neill, have both agreed
annual savings could be $1 trillion a year--all by improving the
quality of care and the coordination of care.
I do not know if it is exactly going to be $700 billion or $1
trillion, but my point is, there is a big savings target out there that
everyone from President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, to George
Bush's Treasury Secretary, to a lot of very well thought of groups in
between, including our National Institute of Medicine, all agree on. So
I think that makes it a very important target to pursue in this
discussion.
It is not just me in believing, at this potential split in the road,
we should work and fight very hard to make sure we are taking the right
path and we do
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not go down the easy-to-score but unnecessary and unhelpful path of
benefit cuts, which singles out seniors in Medicare and does nothing
about the underlying costs of the system and makes it the wrong road to
follow when we have a well illuminated path that can move us toward a
better, more efficient delivery system that provides better quality
health care, better outcomes, fewer hospital-acquired infections,
better coordinated care, stronger electronic health records--all of the
things that will support a truly modern health care system that can be
the envy of the world.
That is the choice we have. I think it would be a terrible mistake to
go the benefit cuts route instead of the reform route, and it is not
just me who says that. George Halvorson is the chief executive officer,
the CEO, of Kaiser Permanente. Kaiser Permanente is one of the biggest
health care systems in the country. It provides health care in many
States, and George Halvorson is a very serious individual who knows his
stuff in health care. He would not be the CEO of that big company if he
did not.
Here is what he said the other day:
There are people right now who want to cut benefits and
ration care and have that be the avenue to cost reduction in
this country. And that's wrong. It's so wrong, it's almost
criminal. It's an inept way of thinking about health care.
That is not me. That is the CEO of Kaiser Permanente.
There are people right now who want to cut benefits and
ration care and have that be the avenue to cost reduction in
this country and that's wrong. It's so wrong, it's almost
criminal. It's an inept way of thinking about health care.
Yet that is the direction that it looks like we may be taking, the
inept direction. I had a hearing in the HELP Committee--the Presiding
Officer, Senator Bennet of Colorado, is a member of that HELP
Committee--and we had some very interesting witnesses. Because the path
toward savings through reform is not just a HELP Committee path, this
is not something that some academic has constructed and maybe if you
take that path things will work, this is a path that major
corporations, major health systems, major hospitals in this country are
already walking. They are already walking down that path.
Kaiser is one of them. Blue Shield of California is another.
Intermountain out in the West is a third. Mayo, Geisinger, Gundersen
Lutheran--there are a number along the East Coast. These are companies
that have determined this is the right path, and they are walking that
path.
Two folks were there from such companies. One was Dr. Gary Kaplan,
who is at the Virginia Mason health system in Seattle, WA. Despite its
name, Virginia Mason, it is actually in Seattle, WA, on the other
coast. He pointed out that they went through a quality management
transformation in their hospital with a cultural transformation, with a
process transformation.
As a result, they have made significant improvements. Just in one
back pain reform process they did with 2,000 patients, they calculated
they have already saved $1.7 million on 2,000 back pain patients, and
those patients are happier with the new regime, the less-expensive
regime, than before because they are getting better quality care.
He testified they saved $11 million in planned capital investment,
reduced inventory costs by $2 million through supply chain expense
reductions, reduced staff walking distance by 60 miles per day, reduced
labor expenses and overtime and temporary labor by half a million
dollars in just 1 year, reduced professional liability insurance
premiums by 56 percent, reduced their self-insured retention fund by 70
percent, reduced the time it takes to report lab tests by more than 85
percent, and improved their medication distribution, reducing errors,
reducing the time when a patient first calls Virginia Mason's breast
clinic with a concern to the time they receive a diagnosis from 21 days
to 3 days, and many patients receive their results on the same day.
These are the kind of improvements that have put Virginia Mason at
the front end and make them, according to the Leapfrog Group, one of
the top hospitals in the country. They are walking the walk of
improving the quality of their operations, improving the quality of
care and saving money by doing so.
The other witness was Greg Poulsen from Intermountain. He described
two examples. One was a sepsis program for people who are admitted to
the hospital suffering from sepsis throughout their system. Sepsis is a
dangerous condition. Sepsis, on average, has a 40-percent mortality
rate. So 4 out of 10 people with sepsis die of it. They have reduced
the 40-percent mortality rate from sepsis to 5 percent--from 4 in 10
dying to 1 in 20 dying. Did it cost a lot of money to do that? Was that
a big investment they had to make? Did it cost the taxpayers a lot to
save those lives? No. What they found is they saved $10 million with
that improvement.
Similarly, they have a diabetes program that has been described by
the former CEO of the Mayo Clinic as the diabetes program he would go
to if he were sick with diabetes that has ``the best outcomes and
lowest costs in the country.''
They saved $5 million a year on diabetes treatment by going to better
health care providing. There is a problem, as he pointed out. That $10
million they saved is actually a revenue loss. Because when they saved
money by not having unnecessary care, by not having complications, by
having things be more efficient and streamlined, what they did was they
reduced their billing to the insurance companies, and it is actually
the insurance companies, it is the payers who saved the $10 million.
What the providers spend is a revenue loss. So we have our system
upside down in that respect, and that is one of the ways we need to
reform our system. A third witness who was there was a Rhode Islander.
His name is Chris Koller. We have a unique office in Rhode Island, an
office of health insurance commissioner. He is the only health
commissioner in the country. Also, I tease him that he is the tallest
insurance commissioner because he is unusually tall, but that is easy
because he is the only one.
But he has done a very good job of bringing our hospitals and
insurance companies together to try to focus on the ways we can deliver
care better. One way is through prevention and primary care. It turned
out that in Rhode Island, the amount of every health care dollar that
was spent on primary care was 5.9 percent. So every $1 spent on health
care in Rhode Island, less than 6 cents, went to primary care, went to
your regular family doctor and the basic health care providers. Less
than 6 cents out of every $1.
The insurance companies have more overhead than that, administering
the system. The costs of administration of the health care system is
more than the primary care providers get out of the system. That is
another sign that the system is upside down. He is encouraging them,
and they have agreed, to step up the spending on primary care by 1
percent a year for 5 years. We believe that is going to make a very
substantial cost savings because there is so much that a primary care
provider can handle without having to go to a specialist, without
having to go to the emergency room, without the condition getting worse
because they could not find you, by simply making primary care more
accessible and more available.
So the additional expense for primary care should bring down system
costs overall and having it designed more intelligently.
I will close with a few words from the witness, Dr. Kaplan, who said
that through the work they have been doing on reform and efficiency, he
said: ``We have demonstrated that the path to higher quality, safer
care is the same path to lower costs.''
He actually said that if we could get more transparency to the system
about who is doing a better job and who is not, what the outcomes are
for different hospitals, that basically where we are right now in the
delivery system reform provisions that were in the Accountable Care
Act, he described them as one of the last chances of a market-based
system.
This is somebody who is in this business all the time and is actually
running a hospital that is actually producing results. This is a person
who is steeped in the reality of health care, and contrary to what we
hear in the cartoon version that infects Washington, where ObamaCare is
socialized medicine and is a step away from market-based care, this
practitioner says the potential of the Accountable Care
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Act, as I see it, is one of the last chances of a market-based system.
It could actually lead to a market, whether it was Medicare and
Medicare Advantage as parts of Medicare or the commercial sector, that
we would actually be able to understand what we are buying and what we
are paying for.
That is the kind of commonsense transformation we need. You remember,
Dr. Kaplan said: We have demonstrated the path to higher quality, safer
care is the same path to lower costs.
Gary Paulsen, Intermountain, and other organizations have shown that
improving quality is compatible with lowering costs. Indeed, high-
quality care is generally less expensive than substandard care, and the
primary challenge for us and the main reason more organizations do not
adopt the high-value model discussed in the hearing that we held is the
underlying fee-for-service payment system which predominates, of
course, in the United States. We pay doctors for doing more, not for
doing better. We pay doctors for doing more things to you rather than
getting you well.
Because we do that, we have the results we have. When you look at
that mess, you can say, OK, we are going to leave all that alone. We
are not going to follow the path that Intermountain, that Gundersen,
Lutheran, that Virginia Mason has proven, that Kaiser has argued for
and proven, that so many systems around the country are doing, you can
say, we are going to forget all that. We are going to leave it in
place. We are going to leave it a mess, and we are just going to cut
benefits away from seniors, from our elderly, from the people who need
care the most, from the people who paid into the system, from the
people who do not have a chance to recover, very often from people who
are not in a position to direct their own care and make effective
choices if they are the very elderly on Medicare or worse, the
Medicare-Medicaid dual eligibles.
We are going to go after those people. We are going to cut their
benefits, and we are not going to take the trouble to follow the path
the professionals who are doing this are already showing is a path that
leads to saving, is a path that leads to a better health care system,
is a path that leads us out of the difficult position of being the only
country in the world that spends 18 percent of our GDP on health care,
of being the most inefficient country in the world in health care by a
50-percent margin. The next closest country in terms of inefficiency in
health care is about 12 percent of GDP. We are at 18. Why is it
necessary that America has to be the most inefficient health care
provider in the world of all the countries we compete with by a factor
of nearly 50 percent? That is half again worse than the most
inefficient competitor we face. It makes no sense to be in that
position.
There is enormous room for improvement. The path to that improvement
is clear. It is already being walked by serious and responsible
institutions that have set this as their corporate goal. That is where
we should go. I will close again by repeating George Halvorson's
exhortation. He is one of the great health care leaders in this
country. He is a savvy corporate manager. He runs an enormous health
care corporation. This is not an idle opinion of his.
There are people right now who want to cut benefits and ration care
and have that be the avenue to cost reduction in this country and
that's wrong. It's so wrong, it's almost criminal. It's an inept way of
thinking about health care.
Those are CEO George Halvorson's words, not mine.
I hope that they ring through this body and we don't make the
mistaken decision to go after Medicare benefits and instead take the
positive path of reform and improvement.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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