Last week was not kind to big
government advocates, as the Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration officials reported that its privatization efforts had
yielded hundreds of millions of dollars in savings from health care initiatives.
If it wasn’t enough that private
operation of eight state hospitals seemed on course to save
$52 million this past fiscal year, or that privatization of the operations
of the Office of Group Benefits with other efficiency measures were expected to
save
$114 million, the jackpot was the amount from the first of the initiatives,
changing Medicaid from a fee-for-service to a managed capitation system.
Louisiana’s Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget was told by the
Department of Health and Hospitals that the predicted first year of savings
reached its $135.9 million goal.
Better, the figure could go much
higher. Presently, five different plans are available, with three using a model
of premium payment to an administrator coordinating providers and two where the
role essentially get combined. Data from the first 10 months of 2013 revealed
that on average the difference in payment per different kind of plan was about $13 per
client month, Thus, DHH has decided that as of February of next year the
only kind of plan offered will the premium payment kind, meaning about half of
the nearly 800,000 covered individuals will have to switch.