FACT SHEET
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The Lewin Report on SB840
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Co-Author List
ARCHIVE: SB921: Health Care for all Californians 2004 Bill
FACT SHEET
SB840 (KUEHL)
The California Health Insurance Reliability Act (CHIRA)
Affordable Health Insurance for All Californians
February 23, 2005
- printable version - (MS Word Doc)
SB 840 (Kuehl), the California Health Insurance Reliability Act, (CHIRA), would provide fiscally sound, affordable health insurance coverage to all Californians, provide every Californian the right to choose his or her own physician and control health cost inflation.
Reliable Coverage: Eligibility is based on residency, instead of on employment or income. Under CHIRA, all residents are covered. No California resident will ever again lose his or her health insurance because of unaffordable insurance premiums, or because he or she changes or loses a job, or goes to or graduates from college or has a pre-existing medical condition.
Affordable: The plan involves NO NEW SPENDING on health care. The system will be paid for by federal, state and county monies already being spent on health care and by affordable insurance premiums that replace all premiums, deductibles, out-of-pocket payments and co-pays now paid by employers and consumers.
Efficient: CHIRA eliminates waste by consolidating the functions of many insurance companies into one comprehensive insurance plan, saving the state and consumers billions of dollars each year. Currently it’s estimated that half of every dollar spent on health care is squandered on clinical and administrative waste, insurance company profits, and overpriced pharmaceuticals. CHIRA is based on a model that has been estimated to save California about $20 billion through reduced administrative costs in the first year alone.
Under CHIRA, California will use its huge purchasing power to buy prescription drugs and durable medical equipment in bulk. CHIRA is the sole health reform that enables California to use its full purchasing power to negotiate the deepest savings. It has been estimated that this model of systemwide bulk purchasing could save California $5.2 billion in the first year.
Most importantly, CHIRA will make our health care system more reliable and secure by stabilizing the growth in health spending; linking spending increases to state GDP and population growth, employment rates and other relevant demographic indicators. CHIRA will combine needed cost controls with medical standards that use the best available medical science, and place an emphasis on preventative and primary care to improve California’s overall health in a way that also saves billions of dollars.
High Quality: Under CHIRA, consumers have total freedom to choose their personal primary care provider. Health care providers and facilities will receive fair reimbursement for all covered services they provide.
CHIRA utilizes proven financial incentives that support the delivery of high quality care, including bonuses for providers working in rural or under-served areas. The plan invests in needed health care infrastructure such as electronic claims and reimbursement systems and statewide medical databases that improve health care quality.
Benefits: Coverage includes all care prescribed by a patient's health care provider that meets accepted standards of care and practice.
Specifically, coverage includes hospital, medical, surgical, and mental health; dental and vision care; prescription drugs and medical equipment, such as hearing aids; emergency care including ambulance; skilled nursing care after hospitalization; substance abuse recovery programs; health education and translation services, including services for those with hearing and vision impairments; transportation needed to access covered services, diagnostic testing; and hospice care.
CHIRA offers California a broad and clear vision for a remodeled health care system that will provide high quality, affordable and reliable health care for all residents. I urge you to support the California Health Insurance Reliability Act of 2005.
For more information contact Sara Rogers at (916) 445-1353 or Judy Spelman at (916) 322-1680.
Lewin Report: Universal Health Care Study Shows Savings
Health care advocates made headlines last week with findings of a new report confirm that California can create a fiscally sound state insurance plan that covers every Californian with a solid, comprehensive health plan, reduces costs and controls health cost inflation.
Senator Sheila Kuehl (D-Los Angeles) has pledged to reintroduce the "California Health Insurance Reliability Act" (formerly SB921) in this new legislative session. The bill, which does not have a bill number yet, is co-authored by both chairs of the legislative Health Committees, Senator Deborah Ortiz (D-Sacramento) and Assemblywoman Wilma Chan (D-Oakland), and also has the support of Speaker Fabian Nunez (D-Los Angeles) and Senate President Don Perata (D-Oakland). The campaign on behalf of this bill will begin with a press conference and lobby day on Wednesday, Feb. 23rd in Sacramento. More information will follow.
Conducted by The Lewin Group, an independent firm with 18 years of experience in healthcare cost analysis, the report finds that a universal program will reduce total health spending in California by $8 billion in the first year, alone. The full report, released by Health Care for All California, is available at http://www.healthcareforall.org/lewin.pdf.
The Lewin report shows that all California residents can have affordable health insurance; and that, on average, individuals, families, businesses and the state of California, all of whom are now burdened with rising insurance costs, will save money. Some highlights include:
SAVINGS OVERALL: The Lewin report model would achieve universal coverage while actually reducing total health spending for California by about $8 billion in the first year alone. Savings would be realized in two ways: 1. The Act would replace the current system of multiple public and private insurers with a single, reliable insurance plan. This saves about $20 billion in administrative costs. 2. California would buy prescription drugs and durable medical equipment (e.g., wheelchairs) in bulk and save about $5.2 billion.
SAVINGS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: In addition, state and local governments would save about $900 million, in the first year, in spending for health benefits provided to state and local government workers and retirees. Aggregate savings to state and local governments from 2006 to 2015 would be about $43.8 billion.
SAVINGS FOR BUSINESSES: Employers who currently offer health benefits would realize average savings of 16% compared to the current system.
SAVINGS FOR FAMILIES: Average family spending for health care is estimated to decline to about $2,448 per family under the Act in 2006, which is an average savings of about $340 per family. Families with under $150,000 in annual income would, on average, see savings ranging between $600 and $3,000 per family under the program in 2006.
COST CONTROLS: By 2015, health spending in California under the Act would be about $68.9 billion less than currently projected. Total savings over the 2006 through 2015 period would be $343.6 billion. Savings to state and local governments over this ten-year period would be about $43.8 billion.
SB840 Co-Author List
The California Health Insurance Reliability Act
February 23, 2005
Senators |
Assembly Members |
Alquist (Principle) |
|
Cedillo |
Chan (Principle) |
Chesbro |
Dymally |
Escutia |
Evans |
Florez |
Goldberg (Principle) |
Lowenthal |
Hancock |
Migden |
Jones |
Ortiz (Principle) |
Koretz |
Perata |
Laird |
Romero |
Leno (Princple) |
|
Leiber |
|
Nava |
|
Pavley |