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Mark Trahant: Indian Country & health care reform. Are we there yet?

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runningwolf

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Dec 24, 2009, 11:43:55 AM12/24/09
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Indian Country & health care reform


Are we there yet?


Early Monday morning the Senate moved health care insurance reform one
step closer to becoming law. But the steps ahead, in political terms,
must be perfect.

But I don’t want to bury the lede: The Indian Health Care Improvement
Act is now in both the Senate and House version of health care reform.
That means it’s off the table when the Senate and House iron out
differences in Conference Committee (probably in early January). If
health care reform becomes law, so does the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act. That should open up new revenue stream for the Indian
Health system with new money for long-term care, more cancer screening
and better mental health treatment options.

Other provisions in the health care bill itself should open up further
resources, ranging from broader eligibility for Medicaid to higher
reimbursement rates in rural areas.

Make no mistake: Indian Country benefits significantly from this
health care reform legislation.

Now back to the politics. The Senate now has the 60 votes for passage.
Monday’s test vote means the countdown has started. There will be more
Senate votes, probably ending just hours before Christmas. Then the
House and Senate versions will need to be reconciled, then two more
votes, a majority in the House and a super majority in the Senate of
60 votes. Then the bill goes to the White House for the president’s
signature.

Exhausted? Think we’ve had enough of health care reform? Time to move
on to the next issue, right? Sorry, but even if all that happens (I’ll
explain the “if” shortly) then the debate begins again on two separate
tracks.

First, the Executive Branch will have to write regulations that define
how the bill will be implemented. Take the word, “quality” for
example. What does that mean? What are the standards for quality care?
Is it different in the Indian Health system? The answers to many such
questions will surface in thousands of pages of regulations issued by
government agencies.

The second track would be the structure for an independent cost
cutting panel for Medicare. The House and Senate have different ideas
about that, so the mission remains up in the air. But there will
probably be a panel that will recommend where Medicare trims future
costs (so much easier for an independent body to do that than
Congress). This is where health reform could produce savings –
something that is essential given the nation’s demographics.

At this point it’s a bit like a long cross-country drive with young
children: “Are we there yet? Are we?”

Well it depends. A few weeks ago I pointed out that that Indian Health
Care Improvement Act failed in the last Congress because of abortion-
related politics. Guess what’s hot on the agenda again? Abortion-
related politics as it relates to the Indian health system. Those who
are against abortion rights say the language in the Senate bill
doesn’t go far enough to limit abortions (or more likely, abortion
referrals) by the IHS. They want a specific prohibition along the
lines of the Vitter amendment, language that doomed the Indian Health
Care Improvement Act in the last Congress.

The test of all of this will be when the final bill reaches both
houses of Congress; will the anti abortion rights advocates (from both
parties) have enough votes to stop health care insurance reform?

I’m more optimistic about this bill. When the president signs it into
law it, this will be a signal sent to every patient, doctor, hospital,
clinic, insurance company, and taxpayer that the entire health care
delivery system is being reshaped. The bill itself won’t make our
health care better, but it launches a process that could do just that.

We’re not there yet. But we are moving.


Mark Trahant is a Kaiser Media Fellow examining the Indian Health
Service and its relevance to the national health care reform debate.
He is a member of Idaho’s Shoshone-Bannock Tribes. Comment at
www.marktrahant.com

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