Reform Medicaid First
Book Forum

Well-known health economists Thomas W. Grannemann of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and Mark V. Pauly of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania warn in their newly released book, Reform Medicaid First: Laying the Foundation for National Health Care Reform (AEI Press, June 2009), that the existing Medicaid program will need to be reformed or replaced before any serious health care reform effort can be enacted. Today, significant differences exist among state programs. While states such as Mississippi and Nevada spend as little as $5,000 per poor person annually, New York and Alaska annually spend more than $15,000 per person below the federal poverty level. Large differences in the country's second-largest health program remain even after correcting for cost-of-living and medical-price differences. This imbalance in Medicaid among states creates an uneven and unstable foundation for any national program to address the needs of uninsured Americans.

In this first important discussion of the serious flaws in the Medicaid program and how best to reform it, Grannemann and Pauly make a strong case for equity, efficiency, and accountability. They explain that controlling the flow of health care dollars is the key to reform and suggest that any new federal health care funds should be directed first toward the lower-income states where the largest numbers of uninsured persons live. The authors propose specific changes in the Medicaid program--from improving provider payment methods to changing the federal medical assistance percentage--to prevent a backlash from overburdened taxpayers that could sink reform efforts in states with many poor people. Responding to the authors' proposals for reform will be Nina Owcharenko of the Heritage Foundation and Alan Weil of the National Academy for State Health Policy. AEI's Robert B. Helms will moderate.

About the Author

 

Robert B.
Helms
  • Robert B. Helms has served as a member of the Medicaid Commission as well as assistant secretary for planning and evaluation and deputy assistant secretary for health policy at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). An economist by training, he has written and lectured extensively on health policy and health economics, including the history of Medicare, the tax treatment of health insurance, and compared international health systems. He currently participates in the Health Policy Consensus Group, an informal task force that is developing consumer-driven health reforms. He is the author or editor of several AEI books on health policy, including Medicare in the Twenty-First Century: Seeking Fair and Efficient Reform and Competitive Strategies in the Pharmaceutical Industry.
  • Phone: 2028625877
    Email: rhelms@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Catherine Griffin
    Phone: 2028625920
    Email: catherine.griffin@aei.org
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