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Obama team looks to federal employee health program as a model
The Obama administration is looking closely at the federal government's health insurance program as it undertakes nationwide health care reform, a senior adviser to the president said on Monday.
The president's team has been working with the Office of Personnel Management, which administers federal benefits, Neera Tanden, counselor for health reform in the Health and Human Services Department secretary's office, told participants of the OPM-sponsored Federal Employees Health Benefits Carrier Conference in Washington. "There are a lot of ideas that we think work very well," she said.
Tanden said it was unlikely that the Obama administration simply would open the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program to the public. But she said the team was studying FEHBP to learn how its efforts to provide high-quality care and leverage large enrollment to bring down costs might be replicated.
One advantage of the federal employee program is its number of health insurance choices, which range from extremely basic coverage to plans that include more kinds of treatments and prescription drugs, according to Tanden. FEHBP also is an efficient organization, she said, noting that about 100 OPM employees coordinate coverage for millions of federal employees and their families.
But FEHBP has critics, especially on issues of cost.
Jacob Hacker, a health care scholar who advised several Democratic presidential candidates during the 2008 primaries, argued in a December 2008 report that FEHBP was less efficient than Medicare, and Medicare would provide a better model for health care reform.
Federal employee groups have made the case that OPM could do more to decrease costs by leveraging FEHBP's large membership, particularly by taking advantage of a Medicare subsidy for prescription drugs.
Tanden said that while the administration respects Hacker's work, the flexibility FEHBP offered was appealing.
"The president thought it was important to offer a wide range of choices to people," Tanden said. "We appreciate that there have been concerns about FEHBP...But broadly, we're appreciative that FEHBP provides choice at exceedingly lower costs that are available in the individual market."
COMMENTS
- I have been very satisfied over the years with BC/BS & FEHB over the years & grateful to be able to take my insurance into retirement. However, at 65 I was told I must each pay Medicare Part B in addition to my BC/BS family plan payment since they now became our secondary provider but with no reduction in premium. It doesn't seem right that BC/BS gets the bulk of the money but Medicare pays most of the bills. Maintaining adequate health ins coverage in retirement has become very challenging financially for most seniors. Barbara Reisert Posted June 24, 2009 12:14 PM
- FEHBP Employee rates should be based on base pay. A GS-2 pays the same rate as a GS-13. The cost to the lower GS-grades is a greater percentage of their income to the point they can not afford to be covered. For the higher grades the cost is not a burden. So lets share. Ronald Augsburger Posted April 16, 2009 12:19 PM
- The federal employee healthcare program has a lot to be desired. There are still a lot of out of pocket expenses that near break employees even if they have supplemental policies. I wouldn't recommend it as the answer to our healthcare woes; however, it is better than what my healthcare would cost if I didn't have it at all. What gets me is the way I have to bargain for my treatment at times when I don't feel well at all. There is always someone who sits down with you BEFORE you get treated to discuss what the insurance will and will not pay. Oftentimes, the treatment I get is not what I need, because the insurance dictates my medical care. Right now there are children in the U.S. who are dying because they need dental care. But I have dental and dental supplemental, and I still have to pay enormous amounts just to get a tooth pulled. What happened to the old string and door trick that worked as a child? Lord help us all! Janet Posted April 2, 2009 11:33 AM
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