IBJNews

Fiscal cliff deal threatens Indiana co-op health plan

Back to TopCommentsE-mailPrint

Last week’s fiscal cliff bargain in Congress dealt a potentially fatal blow to a new health insurance plan that was set to launch this year.

The deal in Congress killed funding for new co-op health insurance plans created by the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The co-ops, called Consumer Operated and Oriented Plans in the act, were supposed to provide not-for-profit alternatives to existing health insurers across the country.

In Indiana, an organization called Remedy Indiana had asked the federal government for $62 million in loans to launch its health insurance plan. The organization, led by Indianapolis physician Ned Lamkin, has letters of support from all of the state’s major hospital systems—such as Indiana University Health in Indianapolis and Deaconess Health System in Evansville—to participate.

Some employers and benefits brokers also were involved in Remedy Indiana’s plans.

Lamkin said he expected a funding decision from the Obama administration in the first quarter, which would have allowed Remedy Indiana to start offering its plan to employers by the end of 2013. Remedy Indiana already had managers lined up to run the organization.

“It was a shocker for everyone,” said Lamkin, CEO of Remedy Indiana. “It is very discouraging to get so far along and then have the rug pulled out from underneath us.”

Remedy Indiana’s goal is to shift the task of managing patients’ health away from health insurers and back to hospitals and physicians—saving significant money by eliminating waste.

In the short-term, Remedy Indiana planned to save money by getting rid of the need for large profits, fat executive salaries and insurance programs that, in Lamkin’s words, are more focused on making profits than on benefiting patients.

In the long-term, Remedy Indiana planned to convene physicians from all its participating health systems, by specialty, to analyze cost, quality and research data to find better ways of treating patients for less money.

“In collaboration with the health systems, we thought it was too good a chance to make a difference,” Lamkin said.

Lamkin, who also is president of the Indiana Employers Quality Health Alliance, isn’t giving up. He noted that the National Alliance of State Health Co-ops is working on Capitol Hill to get Congress to reconsider the halt of co-op funding—which received no debate before its inclusion in the fiscal cliff deal that passed the Senate 89-8 on Jan. 1.

Lamkin said he's also considering other funding options. For example, he will ask Indiana’s hospital systems to consider funding Remedy Indiana on their own. Many hospitals, such as IU Health, St. Vincent Health, Community Health Network and the Suburban Health Organization, already are considering offering or expanding provider-led health plans.

“They basically could assume responsibility for what they do. Right now, they have health plans battering them over the head,” Lamkin said.

 

ADVERTISEMENT

Post a comment to this story

COMMENTS POLICY
We reserve the right to remove any post that we feel is obscene, profane, vulgar, racist, sexually explicit, abusive, or hateful.
 
You are legally responsible for what you post and your anonymity is not guaranteed.
 
Posts that insult, defame, threaten, harass or abuse other readers or people mentioned in IBJ editorial content are also subject to removal. Please respect the privacy of individuals and refrain from posting personal information.
 
No solicitations, spamming or advertisements are allowed. Readers may post links to other informational websites that are relevant to the topic at hand, but please do not link to objectionable material.
 
We may remove messages that are unrelated to the topic, encourage illegal activity, use all capital letters or are unreadable.
 

Messages that are flagged by readers as objectionable will be reviewed and may or may not be removed. Please do not flag a post simply because you disagree with it.

Sponsored by
ADVERTISEMENT

facebook - twitter on Facebook & Twitter

Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ on Facebook:
Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ's Tweets on these topics:
 
Subscribe to IBJ
  1. RKW's comments read like a modern "Chicken Little". As a Raintree resident for many years, "Yes, I'm ready for this." Matter of fact, I welcome The Farm because it's a development that compliments our town, brings new and desirable shopping & dining closer (specialty grocer, upscale shops, micro brew pub, etc), offers upscale condos for empty nesters who want to stay in Zionsville, is being planned and constructed by local, well-reputed firms and, of course, provides desirable non property tax benefits. We all knew the Pittman's were going to develop their property sooner than later. That one of the Pittman's will continue to live on the property helps assure The Farm will be everything promised. This also sets a standard for other developers as to the quality of future developments - which should keep an ugly Walmart at bay for decades. As we've no meglomaniac mayor, I seriously doubt Zionsville would ever aspire to over-priced statues or subsidized retail rents. And we already have a very nice public theater, the Zionsville Performing Arts Center, that meets our cultural needs quite nicely.

  2. Do we add (or subtract) these from the bounty we recieve from RTWFL, Daylight Savings Time, corporate tax giveaways, and the crack job IEDC is doing?? Or is Mike going to blame these on Mitch?

  3. Who makes Tater Tots? They would be a good sponsor, because $3 Million for the alleged "Greatest Spectacle In Racing" is taters. Tiny, tiny taters. But at least they are making up something of the losses accumulated over the years in this dying sport. Buttock in seat is certainly not doing it, nor eyeball on TV, as evidenced by the lack of both.

  4. We loved lakehouse and think the Arbor Village would be a great location. It is less than 2 miles from over 1000 rooftops in the 225,000 to over 1 million range. Many people could use the great fishers trail system to bike or walk there. Just an idea Scotty -- but maybe something closer to 3 Wiseman would good. The only microbrew in area is Ram (boring)

  5. True, it's an ESPN production, but ESPN is just another name for ABC Sports, or what used to be ABC Sports since ABC Sports no longer exists as a name. ESPN=ABC Sports= ESPN. ESPN is, according to Forbes "the world's most valuable media property" worth $40 billion. Despite that, they fired 400 people this week.

ADVERTISEMENT