PART II
Hospital Insurance
for Older People and the Disabled
In its examination of the adequacy of social security protection
for the aged and the totally disabled the Council came to the conclusion
that cash benefits alone are not enough. Monthly cash benefits,
if adequate, can meet regularly recurring expenses such as those
for food, clothing, and shelter, but monthly cash benefits are not
a practical way to meet the problem that the aged and disabled face
in the high and unpredictable costs of health care, costs that may
run into the thousands of dollars for some and amount to very little
for others. Security in old age and during disability requires the
combination of a cash benefit and insurance against a substantial
part of the costs of expensive illness.
The Council's Position in Brief
Essentially the problem is this: Incomes decrease sharply upon
old-age or disability retirement, but the incidence of costly illness
increases. During their working years, when ill health is less frequent,
employed workers can generally meet costs of current care for themselves
and their families--directly or through insurance out of their current
employment income, often through an employee benefit plan and with
the help of their employers. The situation of the aged and disabled
is quite different. Not only do they have the higher health costs
associated with old age and disability but their incomes are greatly
reduced because they are no longer working.
The solution, the Council believes,{12} is to
apply the method of contributory social insurance, which underlies
the present social security program, so that people can contribute
from earnings during their working years and have protection against
the costs of hospital and related services after age 65 and during
disability without having to pay contributions at the time when
income is generally curtailed. Contributory social insurance, the
Council believes, offers the only practical way of making sure that
almost everyone will have hospital protection in old age and during
periods of long-term total disability.
It is not proposed, however, that social insurance cover all the
costs of illness during old age and long-term total disability.The
American approach to income security has traditionally involved
a partnership of private effort and governmental measures. For example,
old-age, survivors, and disability insurance is supplemented by
employer and trade union plans, private insurance, and individual
savings and investments. All contribute to the common goal of personal
and economic independence. Backstopping this combination of measures
for individual self-support are the Federal-State public assistance
programs.
We believe this same pluralistic approach can be used effectively
in meeting the costs of illness during old age and disability. With
social security meeting just about all of the costs of hospitalization,
which, on the average, represent at least half the costs associated
with the more expensive illnesses, the person who is old or totally
disabled will be in a much better position than he is today to meet,
on his own and through private insurance, the costs of physician
services, drugs and the other elements of complete medical care.
Also with social security providing basic hospital protection, it
should be practicable to improve the Federal-State public assistance
programs to make them serve more effectively in meeting the health
costs for older and disabled people whose needs are not met in other
ways.
The Need for Protection Against the Cost of Hospitalization
Older people and disabled people have a special need for protection
against the cost of hospitalization and related services--they need
more care and they have less money to pay for it.
As one would expect, health care expenditures on the average are
much greater for people past 65 than for younger people. Total health
care expenditures for the aged, in fact, are twice as high, and
in the case of expenditures for hospitalization, the ratio is about
2.75 to 1. Older persons go to the hospital more often and have
to stay much longer than those under 65.
The cost of hospitalization affects practically all older people.
Of every ten persons who reach age 65, nine will be hospitalized
at least once during their remaining years and most will be hospitalized
two or more times. In the case of aged couples, the chances are
about even that the husband and wife will each be hospitalized two
or more times.
Not only is hospitalization a virtually universal occurrence among
older people but there is a high correlation between hospitalization
and large total medical expenses. Older people who are hospitalized
in a given year are the ones who have the big expenses. While medical
care costs for all aged couples averaged about $442 in 1962, the
medical expenses of aged couples with one or both members hospitalized
averaged $1,220; for non-married elderly people, average medical
expenses for the year were $270, whereas for those who were hospitalized,
the average was $1,038.{13} Both the averages
and the differentials would be even higher now.
Hospital expenses are a serious problem for the totally disabled
too. Like the aged, they too are hospitalized frequently and in
many cases their hospital stays are long. According to a survey
of workers found disabled under the social security disability provisions
{14} (conducted by the Social Security Administration
in 1960), about one out of five disability beneficiaries under social
security received care in short-stay hospitals in the Survey year;
and, excluding hospitalizations in long-term institutions, half
of those hospitalized were in the hospital for 3 weeks or more.{15}
The problem now faced by older people and the disabled is going
to become even more serious because health costs will undoubtedly
continue to rise, probably at a rate considerably in excess of any
increase in other prices. From 1953 to 1963 the percentage rise
in the consumer price index for medical care items was nearly three
times the increase in the over-all index; and the price index for
medical care items increased more than that for any other major
price-index component. Among the items that compose the medical
care segment of the index, hospitalization costs have risen at a
much faster rate than other components--hospital daily service charges
rose twice as much as medical care costs generally.
Health care has become so expensive that virtually no one, including
the relatively well-off person at the height of his earnings power,
can afford to pay the cost of major, prolonged illness unless he
has effective insurance. And the great majority of the aged and
disabled are neither well-off nor have adequate health insurance.
Older people have, on the average, only one-half as much income
as younger people living in family groups of the same size.{16}
About half of the aged social security beneficiaries have practically
nothing (less than $12.50 a month per person) in continuing retirement
income other than their social security benefits; and for all but
about one-fifth of the aged beneficiaries, benefits were the major
source of continuing retirement income.{17} (Only
15 percent of the aged, for example, have any income from private
pension plans and even for this 15 percent the amount from Social
Security is generally larger than the private pension.)
Totally disabled people also have comparatively low incomes although
they more often depend in part upon the earnings of a spouse.{18}
Many older people and people with long-term total disabilities must
therefore turn to their children and other relatives and to public
agencies for aid in meeting the costs of illnesses that require
hospitalization.
In the 1960's we have seen a large and growing proportion of those
applying for public aid forced to do so only because they cannot
meet their health costs. Today over one-third of public assistance
expenditures for the aged are for health costs, and such costs have
become the most important single reason older people apply for public
assistance.
The Role of Private Plans
The hospital insurance provisions we recommend would work in partnership
with private plans and individual voluntary effort as social security
now does in the field of cash benefits. With social security providing
basic protection against the costs of hospital care and related
services, and with improved cash benefits such as we recommend in
Part III of this report, many people aged 65 and over or disabled
who now cannot afford comprehensive private health insurance would
be able to afford the less expensive supplementary protection against
doctor bills and other health costs which, in combination with social
security, would furnish comprehensive coverage. Employers also would
find it more feasible to continue health protection for employees
into retirement if, instead of having the whole job to do, they
could build on the hospital insurance protection furnished under
social security. These private measures would be built upon the
hospital insurance base, just as the private life insurance and
retirement pensions and annuities that many people have today are
built upon the base of social Security cash benefits.
On the other hand, it is unrealistic to expect private voluntary
insurance alone to provide comprehensive protection for the great
majority of elderly people and totally disabled people. To a large
extent the problem of financing the cost of expensive illness among
people at the younger ages, who are largely dependent on current
earnings, is being met by private insurance organizations, but private
insurance cannot meet this problem for most of the aged at a price
they can afford to pay. Despite years of creative effort and hard
work by the voluntary insurance organizations, less than half of
the totally disabled and only a little over half of the elderly
have any kind of health insurance coverage and most of what they
do have is quite limited. The absolute number of older people without
any kind of protection at all is nearly as large as it was 5 years
ago.
The basic difficulty in relying exclusively on private insurance,
of course, has been that the costs of insurance are necessarily
high because the aged and the disabled need so much in the way of
health care that they cannot pay the costs of adequate insurance
from low retirement incomes. Then too, unlike working people, who
generally get group health insurance coverage through their place
of employment, the disabled and the elderly can ordinarily obtain
health insurance only on an individual or non-group basis. The marketing
and administrative costs associated with the individual handling
that is characteristic of non-group commercial health insurance
make individual coverage about 1.5 times as expensive, on the average,
as group coverage offering the same benefits. Because of this consideration,
together with the fact that hospital costs for the aged run about
2.75 times as much as those for younger people, the protection provided
to an aged person by an individually purchased commercial hospital
insurance policy costs about four times as much as comparable protection
furnished younger people on a group basis. And relatively few disabled
and retired workers have the benefit of contributions made toward
health insurance by employers.
As a result of these facts, most voluntary health insurance within
reach of the pocketbooks of the aged and the disabled is inadequate
in the amounts and types of service covered and in the duration
of benefits. In 1962 (the most recent year for which data are available)
only 10 to 15 percent of the total medical costs of the aged,for
example, was paid for by insurance. Moreover, as hospital costs
rise, those who have health insurance policies paying fixed dollar
amounts toward hospital care will find that the amounts cover an
increasingly smaller proportion of their hospital bills; those who
have policies which provide service benefits rather than fixed dollar
amounts will be faced with increased premiums.
In the case of Blue Cross, which ordinarily provides service benefits
without dollar limits, pressures are heavy to apply experience rating
more and more to the hi-risk older population in order to be able
to offer the young group rates that are more competitive with those
for commercial insurance policies. These pressures will continue
to apply in the future and the result will be additional increases
in Blue Cross premiums for the aged as they are required to pay
rates closer to the true value of their protection.
It is also true that most of the aged who now have some form of
health insurance are those who are still working, those in good
health, and those in the higher income group. To a very large extent
those who can be sold voluntary protection have already been sold.
For all these reasons, in the absence of social
insurance taking on a part of the job, the Council believes that
in all probability the great majority of older people and disabled
people will, for the foreseeable future, continue to be without
adequate protection against health care costs.
The Council believes that the extension of social insurance to
the costs of hospitalization for the elderly and the disabled will
make it possible for the private plans to perform a valuable complementary
role. Since hospital insurance protection will be provided without
further contributions during old age and disability, more of the
retirement dollar will become available for buying current protection
covering other parts of the medical bill, and, as indicated above,
employers will find it more feasible to carry over health protection
for their retired personnel.{19}
The Role of Public Assistance
There will be some disabled and elderly people who are without
the means to add other protection to their basic hospital insurance
or who have special needs such as the need for long-continuing custodial
care. Public assistance programs will, therefore, have an important
continuing role in meeting the total problem. Consequently, the
Council favors the improvement of the program for medical assistance
for the aged (MAA) and the medical care provisions of old-age assistance
and aid to the permanently and totally disabled to provide more
effectively for remaining needs after the proposed social insurance
program goes into effect. The enactment of hospital insurance provisions
for the aged and disabled will save the States some two-fifths of
their present medical expenditures for older people and place them
in a financial position to improve their medical assistance programs.
When the number of those who need help is reduced and when the remainder
do not need help with most of the costs of hospital care, because
of hospital insurance under social security and because of the spread
of effective supplementary protection, the way will be open in many
States for much needed improvements in medical assistance for the
smaller numbers of people who still need help.
There is abundant evidence, however, that the Federal-State programs
of public assistance, without a social insurance program to meet
a large part of the cost, cannot do the job of filling the gaps
left by private voluntary insurance. Many States either cannot or,
in the light of other financial priorities, will not, put up enough
money to meet the need. Despite the fact that the Federal Government
will pay, out of general revenues, from 50 percent to 80 per cent
of the cost of a State program to meet the health needs of the aged,
only a few States have developed adequate programs for the very
poor, and none has combined both comprehensive care and liberal
enough tests of income and assets to meet the health needs of more
than a small proportion of the retired aged in the State. Some have
no medical-assistance-for-the-aged program at all.
Under a grant-in-aid system the wealthier States are the ones most
likely to establish the better programs and most likely to get the
major share of Federal funds. Furthermore, States vary in their
willingness to apply their resources to a given purpose. As a result,an
approach that depends on State initiative cannot reasonably
be expected to lead to an adequate nationwide program.
In October 1964, 68 percent of Federal MAA funds went to five of
the wealthier States with only 31 percent of the country's aged.
For reasons explained in the introduction to this report, the Council
does not, in any event, favor placing a main reliance on assistance
in dealing with a problem which is faced by practically all the
aged and the disabled. Even an adequate assistance program would
have grave drawbacks for the recipient and for our society as a
whole when compared with the method of social insurance. The Council
believes that to the extent practicable the objective should be
to prevent dependency rather than alleviate it after it has occurred.
Yet in some circumstances assistance will continue to be necessary.
This is why the Council recommends that the Federal Government give
continuing support to improvements in the medical provisions of
assistance programs so that all the aged and all the disabled may
have their full medical needs met through a combination of social
security, private protection and savings, and, as a last resort,
for the unusual need and circumstance, through an improved and generally
available assistance plan.
Basic Elements of the Recommended Plan
The Council recommends that the core of protection be coverage of
the costs of hospital care, subject to a small deductible. Coverage
of three additional types of services, which can frequently take
the place of inpatient hospital care, is also recommended: (1) extended
care, following a hospital stay, in a hospital-operated or hospital-affiliated
facility capable of providing high quality convalescent and rehabilitative
services; (2) organized home nursing services which are medically
supervised and are provided by organizations staffed and equipped
to offer coordinated services sufficient so that an individual who
is confined at home, but not in need of round-the-clock services,
could receive substantially the full array of nursing services and
therapeutic services (not including those of a physician) needed
to care for him at home; and (3) subject to a small deductible,
hospital outpatient diagnostic services covering the full use of
the hospital's facilities and personnel but not covering the diagnostic
services of the patient's personal physician.
A major principle that guided the Council in developing its recommendations
is that health services should be tailored to the health needs of
the patient. Provision for the four types of benefits--hospital
care, extended care following the care given in the hospital, organized
home nursing care, and hospital outpatient diagnostic services--would
enable the older or disabled person, together with those who participate
in planning for his care, to have available the kinds of services,
and a level of care, most appropriate to his individual need. Particularly
for the aged, the next step in the care of a person who has been
hospitalized for a serious illness may be a period of medically
supervised treatment in an extended-care facility rather than continued
occupancy of a high-cost bed normally used by acutely ill hospital
patients. The benefit structure should cover a continuum of institutional
and home nursing services and should provide an appropriate level
of care for individuals who require convalescent care of somewhat
lesser degree of intensity than that provided for hospital inpatients.
The coverage of important alternatives to hospitalization would
help subordinate financial to medical considerations in decisions
shared in by the doctor, patient and institution on whether inpatient
hospital care or another form of care would be best for the patient.
The recommended benefits would give financial support to the provision
of institutional and non-institutional services at the most appropriate
level of intensity for patients who require care of extended duration.
Covering each of the stages of required care is conducive to careful
planning of the long-range treatment of those suffering serious
illnesses.
In the course of formulating the proposed hospital insurance provisions
for the aged and disabled, the Council was mindful of the increasing
interest that the community as a whole has demonstrated in seeing
to it that high quality health services are provided and that full
value is received for the health dollar. Reflecting this community
interest, many State and local hospital planning groups private
health cost prepayment organizations, and others have called attention
to the effects of inadequate planning of facilities, excess capacity,
inefficient operation, and unneeded services, any of which, whenever
they occur, can result in an increase in health costs far beyond
that attributable to medical and scientific achievements. The work
of these groups shows that there is real promise for an improvement
in the quality of care and at the same time improvement in the efficiency
with which the services are provided.
The Council believes this matter to be of such widespread concern
that it recommends the creation of a commission, its members to
be appointed by the President, composed of experts in the fields
of health care and hospital planning, of representatives of groups
and agencies purchasing health care on a large scale, and of the
general public, for the purpose of enhancing the effectiveness of
our hospitals throughout the country in the provision of high-quality
health care. The recommendations of such a commission would be of
benefit primarily to the population as a whole but would, of course,
also be of long-run importance to the hospital insurance program
for elderly and disabled people.
1. Inpatient Hospital Benefits
The proposed hospital insurance for people age 65 or over and
the disabled should cover a number of days sufficient to meet the
cost of inpatient hospital services for the full stay of almost
all beneficiaries.
The Council believes that the number of days for which inpatient
hospital benefits are paid should be enough to cover the full hospital
stays required in nearly all cases. Sixty days of coverage for each
spell of illness would accomplish this Purpose. Sixty days would
cover the full stay of all but about 3 to 5 percent of the stays
of older persons. Moreover, it is quite possible that with coverage
in extended-care facilities, such as we recommend, many of those
who would otherwise stay in acute general hospitals for over 60
days could be transferred to extended-care facilities.
The Council holds the view, which is shared by many experts on
hospital insurance, that the availability of hospital coverage for
substantially longer periods may, especially among the aged, result
in excessively long hospital stays and therefore unnecessary cost
to the program. We therefore believe that it is desirable to place
a limit on the number of covered days in the acute general hospital
and, at the same time, provide for extended care in less expensive
facilities.
The Council believes that the proposed hospital insurance should
not include any provision under which beneficiaries would choose
among various combinations of benefits of the same actuarial value
but with a varying number of days and higher and lower deductibles.
The Council sees little gain in such a choice and, on the contrary,
believes that for most beneficiaries the need to make a choice would
be confusing and upsetting and that widespread dissatisfaction could
be expected among the large number who would later discover that
they would have been better off with a different choice. Any attempt
to meet this dissatisfaction by allowing people to change options
would significantly increase the cost of the program for the whole
group of contributors by giving an unfair advantage to those who
could anticipate the need for a specific type of protection.
2. Outpatient Hospital Diagnostic Services
Payment under the program should be made for the costs of outpatient
hospital diagnostic services furnished beneficiaries.
Recent progress in science and medicine has resulted in the development
of complex services and equipment for the more accurate and more
timely diagnosis of disease. Because of the cost of the equipment
and the need for specialized personnel to operate it, the hospital
has increasingly become a diagnostic center which is used when expensive
and complex tests are required. Providing for the payment of the
cost of expensive outpatient hospital diagnostic services should
help to encourage early diagnosis of disease by removing financial
barriers to the use of such services. Payment for outpatient hospital
diagnostic services would also help to support the efficient provision
of care by eliminating a financial incentive for hospital admissions
to obtain diagnostic services.
3. Deductibles
Hospitalized beneficiaries should pay a deductible equal to the
cost of one-half day of care--$20 at the program's beginning. In
the case of beneficiaries who are provided outpatient diagnostic
services, this deductible amount should be applied for each 30-day
period during which diagnostic services are provided.
The Council believes that beneficiaries who are hospitalized should
be required to pay a small amount toward the cost of their hospital
stay. Such a deductible amount might help to reduce unnecessary
hospital admissions. On the other hand, we would not favor a deductible
amount of substantial size since such a deductible might well deter
many beneficiaries from seeking needed care. In the Council's judgment
a deductible amount which is equal to about a half, or even three-fourths,
of the national average cost per patient day of hospital care would
not be so large as to represent a significant impediment to needed
care. Such a deductible amount–$20 to start--would, moreover, make
it possible to provide, within the funds available to the proposed
program, more extensive protection against catastrophic health costs
than would otherwise be possible.
Provision for a similar deductible amount in the outpatient diagnostic
benefit would limit coverage to diagnostic procedures with a significant
financial impact. It should also have the effect of excluding from
the coverage of the program the type of routine laboratory and other
diagnostic procedures that are customarily furnished in or through
the physician's office.
4. Services in Extended-Care Facilities
The cost of post-hospitalization extended-care services in facilities
which provide high-quality rehabilitative and convalescent services
should be covered so as to pay for a minimum number of days after
hospitalization in all cases, with additional days of extended-care
services being paid for if the patient has not used all of his inpatient
hospital coverage.
The services that would be covered would be those furnished to patients
in extended-care facilities which are under control of a hospital
or affiliated with a hospital and which are designed primarily to
render convalescent and rehabilitative services. Care in such a
facility will frequently represent, particularly among the aged,
the next appropriate step after the intensive care furnished in
a hospital and will make unnecessary the continued occupancy of
a high-cost bed normally used by acutely ill patients.
Services of this kind are essential in the over-all treatment of
many illnesses following their acute stage and prior to the time
a person can return to his home or transfer, in some instances,
to an essentially custodial institution. And, of course, extended-care
coverage, even for a limited duration, will also be of benefit to
many older patients with chronic or terminal illness who can be
transferred from intensive care in acute general hospitals.
Since the proposed program is designed primarily to support efforts
to cure and rehabilitate, and since "nursing home" care,
in many cases, is oriented not to curing or rehabilitating the patient
but to giving him custodial care, the Council does not propose the
coverage of care in nursing homes generally.
In order to provide an incentive for transferring a patient from
a hospital to an extended-care facility at an early point, when
such transfer is medically desirable, the Council believes that
coverage should be provided for 2 additional days of extended care,
if needed, for each day the patient's hospital stay is less than
60 days. A minimum of 30 days or so might be covered in all cases.
The Council recognizes that hospital-affiliated facilities which
provide post-acute convalescent and rehabilitative care do not exist
in many communities and that the services therefore may not be available
immediately to many of the beneficiaries who might need them. The
Council believes, however, that the coverage under the proposed
program will encourage the development of such facilities and that,
with the help of other programs designed to assist directly with
construction, such extended-care services can be made generally
available within a reasonable time.
5. Organized Home Nursing Services
Insurance coverage should be provided for organized home nursing
services.
As a fourth element in the protection it proposes, the Council recommends
the coverage of organized home nursing services–that is, services
provided on a visiting basis in the patient's own home.
Coverage of medically supervised home nursing services provided
through qualified nonprofit or public agencies would encourage the
establishment of organized home care programs. Experience has shown
that such visiting programs can bring high-quality care to the patient
in his own home, thus avoiding the need for hospitalization altogether
in some cases or facilitating the discharge of patients not only
from hospitals but from extended-care facilities. The Council believes
that a substantial number of professional visits a year--in the
range of two to three hundred--should he covered in order to make
organized home nursing services a real alternative to institutionalization.
Organized home care services sometimes include the services of hospital
interns and residents-in-training. We believe that payment should
be made for their services when furnished but only if the services
provided are part of a professionally approved training program
for such individuals.
6. Payments on the Basis of Reasonable Cost
The extent of hospital insurance and related protection should
be specified in terms of the services covered rather than in terms
of fixed dollars, and covered services should be paid for on the
basis of the full reasonable cost of the services.
The Council recommends that protection should be in the form of
service benefits, with payments for covered services made directly
to the institution or organization furnishing the services rather
than payments of fixed dollar amounts to the beneficiary receiving
the services. Service benefits would provide more secure and reliable
protection for the patient and enable the program to promptly adjust
payment to hospitals in accordance with changes in hospital costs
resulting from the acquisition of new equipment, the adoption of
new health practices, and the general improvement of services. The
inpatient hospital benefits should cover all hospital services and
supplies ordinarily furnished by the hospital for necessary care
and treatment of its patients, except that accommodations more expensive
than semi-private accommodations would be paid for only if medically
necessary. Luxury items would not be included.
The hospital or other provider of service should be reimbursed for
the reasonable cost of services provided. Payment on a reasonable
cost basis would be in line with the recommendations of many expert
groups, including the American Hospital Association. The established
practices of most Blue Cross plans are generally in line with this
recommendation.
It is likely that no single formula for estimating the cost of services
will prove best under all circumstances, and provision should be
made to permit variations in hospital practices and services to
be taken into account.
7. Hospital Staff Review of Utilization
Hospitals should be required, as a condition of participation,
to establish professional staff committees to review the services
utilized.
Procedures for medical staff review of hospital admissions, length
of stays, the medical necessity for services provided, and the efficient
use of services and facilities are coming into use in many hospitals,
and the experience with some of these procedures has been promising.
Procedures for the recertification of the continued need for service
by the attending physician have also been adopted in some hospitals.
The Council believes that all participating hospitals should be
required to have staff committees to review the utilization of services
and that consideration should be given to certification procedures.
The structure and responsibilities of the staff committee should
be left to the discretion of the hospital and its medical staff.
However, such committees should be required at least to conduct
sample reviews of hospital admissions among the beneficiaries of
the program and to review long-stay cases. The professional judgments
obtained through the use of such a staff committee would provide
a safeguard against the improper use of services.
8. Administration
The proposed hospital insurance provisions should be administered
by the same Federal agencies which administer the social security
program but in carrying out this responsibility the Federal Government
should use private and State agencies to the extent that these agencies
can contribute to efficient and effective operation.
The Council recommends that the Federal Government have over-all
responsibility for the operation of the proposed hospital insurance
program but that it use both qualified private organizations and
State agencies for the performance of certain functions where such
use would contribute to the efficiency of administration.
Many of the functions necessary to the administration of the proposed
hospital insurance provisions would require little, if any, additional
effort since they are now being successfully performed under the
social security program and would simultaneously serve the purposes
of the hospital insurance provisions and the existing cash benefit
provisions. These functions include the collection of contributions;
the maintenance of earnings records; the establishment of age, disability,
and the status of dependents; the determination of whether insured
status requirements for eligibility are met; and the maintenance
of current records of eligibles under the program.
The Council recommends, however, that the authority given to the
Federal administrator should be flexible enough to permit him to
determine whether or not to use the help of private and State agencies,
and to what extent. Included among the functions which might be
carried out by private agencies are those related to arranging for
hospitals and other providers of health services to participate
in the program and handling the payment of hospital bills covering
costs insured by the program. State agencies which license health
facilities could be used, for example, to assure that health facilities
desiring to participate in the program meet the requirements for
participation. The Government might find that functions such as
these could be carried out better, or at less cost, if instead of
performing them directly it arranged to have them performed by private
and public agencies with experience in similar functions.
9. The Basis of Eligibility for Benefits
Hospital insurance benefits should be provided for aged and disabled
beneficiaries of the social security program, and special provision
should be made for the next few years for those who have not met
the requirements of eligibility under the program.
In the long run, all people age 65 or over and all people with long-term
total disabilities who have worked long enough to become entitled
to monthly social security cash benefits will have paid hospital
insurance contributions as well as contributions for cash benefits
and will be entitled to both types of protection on the basis of
the insured status provisions of present law. The Council believes
that the hospital insurance benefits should also be available to
people who are age 65 or over, or who will be-come 65 in the next
few years, whether or not they have made significant contributions
toward hospital insurance and whether or not they are entitled to
social security cash benefits. Such persons have not had the opportunity
to gain protection by contributing to the hospital insurance program
but their need for such protection is equally great.
People who attain age 65 after a specified date should be required
to have a gradually increasing number of earnings credits under
social security, and the number required for eligibility for hospital
insurance should ultimately be the same as that required for social
security cash benefits.{20} The cost of the protection
provided under this provision should be met from general revenues,
as explained below in the recommendation on financing.
After consideration of all possible alternatives, the introduction
of hospital insurance by making it part of the ongoing social insurance
system seems to be highly desirable in social, economic and administrative
terms.
10. Financing
The proposed hospital insurance program should be financed by
a special earmarked contribution of 0.4 percent of covered earnings
from employees and from employers, and 0.5 percent from the self-employed,
with an 0.15 percent contribution from Federal general revenues
to cover the cost of benefits for those already retired or disabled.
The contributions for hospital insurance should be an earmarked
percentage of covered earnings, established as a new tax, separate
from the taxes in the Federal Insurance Contributions Act that support
the present social security cash benefits. The proceeds of this
new tax would be kept separate from the taxes which finance the
present social security program. These proceeds would be deposited
in a newly created hospital insurance trust fund separate from the
old-age and survivors insurance trust fund and the disability insurance
trust fund. However, the employment and earnings coverage and the
maximum on covered earnings to which the new tax would apply should
be the same as those to which the present social security taxes
apply so that the recordkeeping tasks of employers and the Government
would be largely unaffected by the establishment of a separate contribution
for hospital insurance.
Hospital insurance financing separate from that of old-age, survivors,
and disability insurance should allay any concern that the hospital
insurance program might in any way impinge upon the financial soundness
of the OASDI trust funds. Furthermore, identifying the contribution
as a hospital insurance contribution will tend to increase the contributor's
sense of financial responsibility for the benefits provided.
Several members of the Council, however, while believing in the
value of a separate trust fund, are of the opinion that it is not
necessary to have a new and separate tax either to allay possible
concern about the financial soundness of the social security program,
to maintain the identity of the hospital insurance financing, or,
in general, to accomplish the objectives of the proposal.
The contribution rates should be 0.4 percent of covered earnings
each for employees and employers and 0.5 percent for the self-employed.
{21} It is assumed that these contributions for
hospital insurance would go into effect at least 6 months earlier
than the first hospital insurance benefits were paid. For example,
if the plan were enacted in 1965, the contributions might go into
effect in January 1966 and benefits might first be paid in July
1966.
In addition to the earmarked contributions there would be a contribution
from Federal general revenues to meet the cost of hospital insurance
benefits for those already retired or disabled. The Government contribution
would be justified in terms of the health and welfare of the Nation's
aged and disabled and the reduction in general revenue costs that
will follow as social insurance reduces the need for public assistance.
It is proposed that the cost to the Government be met by annual
and automatic appropriations over a 50-year period. The Government's
cost on this basis is estimated to be 0.15 percent of covered payrolls.
The recommended contribution rates are designed to be sufficient
to cover the estimated costs of the proposed benefits both in the
short run and over the long run. Because sound financing depends
on the validity of the cost estimates used and this in turn depends
on the validity of the assumptions which underlie the estimates,
the Council believes it to be in order for this report to contain
a statement of the assumptions it has directed be used in making
the cost estimates.
As in the case of estimates of the cost of cash benefits under the
social security program, assumptions underlying hospital insurance
cost estimates can vary widely and still be reasonable. For hospital
insurance the range over which cost assumptions may vary and still
be reasonable is somewhat greater than for the cash benefits. For
this reason, we have taken great care to assure that the assumptions
used in estimating the costs err, if at all, on the conservative
side.
Clearly, the cost of the proposed program, expressed in dollars,
will be an increasing cost. One important factor which will tend
to increase the cost of the program over time will be the rising
cost per day of hospitalization. Another factor tending to increase
costs will be the growing number of people who are eligible for
hospital insurance. A third factor is the increasing average age
of those who will be protected.
Since the income to the system will come from a percentage of covered
earnings, and since over the years it can be expected that more
and more people will be employed and that earnings levels will rise,
the income of the system will also increase. To take into account
both rising costs and rising income, the analysis of financing is
done in terms of costs as a percent of covered (taxable) earnings.
Thus, the Council's assumptions concerning future hospital costs
are stated in terms of the expected future relationship between
rising hospital costs and rising earnings--of how increases in hospital
costs will compare with increases in covered earnings (and therefore
with increases in contribution income).
Earnings reflect the increasing productivity of labor. Therefore,
on the average and over time, the general level of earnings will
increase much faster than the general price level. But in recent
years the reverse has been true in the case of hospital prices;
they have been increasing substantially faster than the general
level of earnings. Obviously, however, hospital costs cannot continue
indefinitely to rise faster than earnings; if they did, ultimately
no one could afford hospital care. Nevertheless, the financing of
the hospital insurance program must make allowance for the strong
likelihood that hospital costs will, for a time, continue to increase
faster than earnings. A reasonable assumption would be that the
differential between the rate of increase in hospital costs and
the rate of increase in earnings will get smaller and that eventually
hospital prices will increase at a somewhat lower rate than earnings
even though at a much higher rate than other prices.
Specifically, our assumption for the relatively short run is that
hospital costs will rise faster than earnings for 10 years after
the program begins operation, but not quite as fast thereafter.
The Council has assumed that until 1970 the differential between
hospital costs and earnings will continue to be the same as the
average over the last 10 years (2.7 percent) {22}
and that in the following 5 years the differential will average
half as much.{23}
The Council does not presume to have any firm basis for knowing
just how much hospital prices or other prices will rise in the distant
future. However, because of the comparatively large component of
labor costs which will always be present in health services and
because of the cost of increasing quality of care, the Council has
assumed that hospital costs will probably rise indefinitely considerably
faster than other prices. Therefore, the Council's assumption on
the relation of hospital costs to earnings is that after the first
10 years of the program's operation (during which hospital costs
are assumed to rise faster than earnings), hospital costs will rise
slightly less than earnings but substantially more than other prices.
(See Appendix B, for further discussion of the specific assumptions.)
The conservative nature of this assumption is made plain when one
considers the future price levels it implies. The over-all effect
of the assumed price rises, if the past relationship between earnings
and the general price level continues, is that in the next 75 years
hospital prices will have risen 710 percent while other prices will
have risen by about 110 percent.
Another factor that affects the financing of the system is the limitation
placed on the maximum amount of annual earnings subject to contributions
(the contribution base) and its relationship to increases in earnings
levels. As has been noted, income to the system tends to rise as
earnings rise. However, if over the long-run the maximum on earnings
which are taxed were fixed--that is, if the maximum did not rise
as earnings rise, there would be an increasingly inhibiting effect
on contribution income. More and more people would be paying contributions
on the maximum earnings covered, and increases in their earnings
would not be subject to the contribution rate.
The Council's assumption is that the contribution base will not
remain fixed. In the short run the Council recommends an increase
in the base in 1966 and 1968, primarily to take account of the past
rise in earnings levels. For the longer run, one of the assumptions
made in preparing cost estimates for hospital insurance is that
periodically there will be increases in the contribution base if
earnings rise. These increases are assumed because the base, which
under the cash-benefit provisions is also the maximum amount of
earnings creditable for benefits, must be kept generally in line
with changes in earnings levels if cash social security benefits
are to continue to have a reasonable relationship to the earnings
they are intended to replace and if social security contributions
are to vary with earnings.
The great bulk of the income from contribution base increases would
of course be used to raise cash benefits to keep them in line with
higher earnings levels. For example, if hospital insurance contributions
are about one-tenth of contributions under the old-age, survivors,
and disability insurance program (as the Council recommends) a little
over 90 percent of the income from any future increase in the contribution
base would go toward old-age, survivors,
and disability insurance and a little less than 10 percent toward
hospital insurance.
The Council's assumption is, then, that legislative action will
be taken from time to time to adjust the contribution base in line
with rising earnings. However, the Council recognizes that over
the short-run the increases which it expects in the contribution
base, beyond those adopted concurrently with hospital insurance,
may not occur as anticipated. The Council recommends, therefore,
that the contribution rates for hospital insurance be designed to
provide sufficient income to cover benefit expenditures even if,
for a number of years, no further increase in the base is enacted.
The contribution rates proposed by the Council are so designed.
In summary, the principles which the Council has followed in making
its recommendation for the contribution rates necessary to support
the proposed hospital insurance program are as follows: The Council
recommends that the income to the hospital insurance program be
large enough each year to cover benefit outgo with a prudent allowance
for increases in hospital costs as well as for the possibility that
the contribution base increases may lag behind rising earnings.
A contribution rate of 0.4 percent each for employee and employer
(0.5 percent for the self-employed) together with the 0.15 percent
from the Government would be sufficient not only to meet benefit
costs but also to build up substantial amounts in the hospital insurance
trust fund. The new trust fund would have a sizable balance from
the start, since contributions toward the program would be collected
6 months or so before benefits would be paid.
The recommended maximum amount of annual earnings tax-able would
be $6,000 in 1966 rising to $7,200 in 1968, a recommendation discussed
in Part I. While, as indicated above, it is contemplated that this
maximum would rise in the future, the recommended contribution schedule
would yield income in excess of outgo for at least the next 10 years
even if the base is not increased after 1968.
The following table summarizes the cost effect of the four types
of benefits proposed to be covered:
ACTUARIAL BALANCE UNDER PROPOSED
PLAN OF HOSPITAL INSURANCE
(Costs expressed as percentage of taxable payroll according
to intermediate-cost estimates) |
Item |
Level-Cost |
Level-Cost Effect of Changes:
Hospital benefits, 60-day maximum, 1/2-day deductible.
Extended care services, 30-day maximum {1}
Outpatient diagnostic services, deductible of 1/2-day hospital
cost
Home nursing services, 240-visit maximum |
+.84
+.02
+.01
+.03 |
Level-Cost of Proposed Program
Level-Equivalent of Contribution Schedule {2}
Actuarial Balance |
.90
.90
.00 |
{1}With additional days if all of hospital benefits
are not used.
{2} The 0.15 percent of payroll from general revenues for 50
years is equivalent to a level rate of 0.10 percent of payroll. |
Conclusion: The Council finds that health costs represent
the greatest remaining threat to the economic security of our aged
and severely disabled citizens. The social insurance approach, the
Council believes, is singularly fitted to serve in dealing with
this threat. What is needed is an arrangement under which working
people, together with their employers, can contribute from earnings
during their working years and have insurance protection against
health costs in later years, without further contribution, when
their health costs will be high and their incomes low. Only social
insurance, as typified by the social security program, can assure
that such an arrangement will apply to practically everyone who
works for a living.
The Council has developed and presented in this report a plan under
which the major part of the costs incident to hospitalization and
related care in old age or during periods of total disability will
be paid for through the contributory social security program. The
plan will pay for these costs in a way which is in keeping with
the high standards of American health care. The plan will be responsive
to changing methods and improvements that are likely to occur in
health care in this country. The plan will accommodate the individual's
freedom of choice of health care facilities and will in no way interfere
with the private practice of medicine or with the independence of
our voluntary hospital system. The Council has included recommendations
which, if adopted, would assure that the proposed plan of hospital
insurance for older people and totally disabled people will be soundly
financed through its own contribution schedule and trust fund.
While neither private insurance nor public assistance, alone or
together, can meet the pressing need for hospital protection on
the part of the aged and disabled, the recommended plan contemplates
an important role for both. The hospital protection proposed to
be provided under the social security program will serve as a foundation
on which individuals can build private health insurance, just as
old. age, survivors, and disability insurance under social security
is serving as a base on which people build additional protection
through private means. With social security providing basic protection
against hospital and related costs, public assistance will assume
the role best suited for it--that of a program intended to help
the members of the relatively small group whose special needs and
circumstances are such that they are unable to meet their health
costs through social security or through private insurance or other
resources.
The Council is confident that the principles of social insurance
underlying its recommended plan for hospital insurance for the aged
and the totally disabled can be applied successfully as they have
been applied to social security cash benefits. Today's social security
program assures that the vast majority of older people and totally
disabled people will receive a regular monthly income to help them
meet the costs of day-to-day living. The proposed provisions for
hospital insurance will round out this security by removing the
greatest remaining obstacle to the financial independence of these
groups. With such provisions in effect, millions of our older citizens
will be able to look forward to their years of retirement without
the dread of overwhelming costs arising from serious illness.
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