WASHINGTON
As Minnesota U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann accused President Obama of fraud in his health plan and her Republican colleagues continued to vow to kill what they derisively call "Obamacare," two executives from Minneapolis came to the nation's capital last week to explain the inevitability of some form of health care reform.
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Minnesota CEO Pat Geraghty and Mark Eustis, CEO of Fairview Health Services, said they aren't waiting to try new approaches. They talked about their partnership in a program that changes the way patients receive and insurers pay for health care.
The model increases payments for good clinical outcomes for groups of patients rather than reimbursing doctors for each procedure they perform. It allows patients to pick among several health plans, preserving some freedom of choice in selecting doctors. It includes cost-saving innovations, such as online consultations with doctors in lieu of office visits, menus of services patients can buy and encouragement of advance directives to reduce expensive end-of-life procedures.
"Whatever comes out of a legislative process, we'll have to work with," Geraghty said in an interview. "And it will probably be mostly focused on access. But we knew that going after improving quality and controlling cost was going to be valuable and important and something that had to happen."
Geraghty and Eustis spoke at a national gathering of health insurers and health care providers who discussed ways to implement the legislation that Republicans vow to destroy.
The two-day meeting, sponsored by the trade group America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), revealed the limits of political rhetoric that suggests health care reform could be repealed. The Senate already has rejected the House repeal bill. Obama will veto any attempt to completely overturn one of his signature policy initiatives.
Furthermore, the political posturing doesn't deal with what Geraghty told the AHIP conference in behalf of an insurance cooperative covering 2.7 million Minnesotans: "We're tired of defending a broken health system."