Certificate of Need: A Bad Idea with Political Staying Power

Politically, it's impossible to scrap CON without addressing indigent care.
Politically, it’s impossible to scrap CON without addressing indigent care.

by James A. Bacon

Every so often Virginia undergoes a spasm of skepticism regarding the Certificate of Need (CON) law that subjects proposals for hospital expansions and equipment purchases to regulatory approval. The law gives proof to the oft-heard claim that Virginia is “pro business” — state government protects existing businesses from the challenges of newcomers — and the lie to the idea that the Old Dominion is a champion of economic competition and innovation.

We’re seeing such a spasm right now. Op-ed pieces by free market-friendly writers have been published recently that highlight problems with the law. (For example, the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Bart Hinkle tackled the subject in November, and the Thomas Jefferson Institute’s Mike Thompson did in late December.)

Both pieces raise excellent points. Hospitals use CON regulations to delay and block encroachment onto their turf. By limiting competition, the regulatory barrier creates capacity shortages that allow hospitals either to charge more or to maximize utilization, thus increasing profitability. Hinkle asks a logical question: If Virginia Republicans believe their own propaganda and really, truly support free market economics, which they invoke in their opposition to the expansion of Obamacare, why don’t they scrap Virginia’s COPN law?

The answer, of course, is that Virginia’s hospital lobby is extremely influential in Virginia. In the 2014-2015 reporting period, the health care industry (which includes hospitals, physicians and other health care providers) contributed $2.6 million to Virginia PACs and political candidates — surpassed only by the real estate and financial sectors, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. And the hospital industry, which serves the interest of existing industry players, not potential newcomers, fights to keep the law.

No one justifies the law anymore based upon its original pretext, which was that excessive spending on capital expansion drove up the cost of health care. Rather, they argue just the opposite: regulatory-induced scarcity helps prop up hospital profits. And profits need propping considering all the indigent patients that hospitals are expected to care for.

Indeed, the hospitals’ argument appears more potent than ever since General Assembly Republicans stymied Medicaid expansion in Virginia as part of their larger opposition to Obamacare. While blocking Medicaid is entirely justifiable on a number of grounds, it does create a problem for Virginia’s hospital industry. On the logic that Medicaid expansion would mean fewer indigent patients, Obamacare cuts federal payments to hospitals with indigent-care burdens.  Thus, Virginia hospitals are stuck with the indigent patients but get no federal support. The Virginia Hospital Association and Healthcare Association (VHHA) can plausibly argue that it needs CON more than ever.

If we’re going to advance the cause of scrapping CON in Virginia, it is insufficient to repeat old, familiar — and politically ineffective — arguments. We need to dig deeper.

Thomas Stratman and Jacob W. Russ with George Mason University’s Mercatus Center made an important contribution to the debate with their July 2014 paper, “Do Certificate-of-Need Laws Increase Indigent Care?” They directly tackled the argument that CON laws create a quid pro quo in which state agencies increase hospital profits in the expectation that hospitals will use the profits to support indigent care. After comparing CON states with non-CON states, they concluded: “The effect of CON programs on indigent care shows no clear pattern using either direct or indirect measures of indigent care. However, consistent with the existing literature, our results suggest that CON programs restrict entry and limit the provision of regulated medical services. For example, CON states have about 13 percent fewer hospital beds per 100,000 persons than non-CON states.”

Of course, local CON defenders could argue that the Old Dominion is an exception to the national rule, so the Stratman-Russ findings do not end the debate. To overcome industry objections to scrapping the CON law, deregulation advocates need to demonstrate that:

  1. CON as practiced here in Virginia leads to less hospital capacity and diagnostic equipment than the marketplace otherwise would support;
  2. Virginia hospitals are more profitable as a result, either because they enjoy higher rates of utilization or they have the market power to charge higher rates; and
  3. If deprived of protected profits, Virginia hospitals still would have the financial wherewithal to treat indigent patients.

I am fairly certain that the first two propositions are true but am less confident of the third. It’s fine to argue economic theory (I do it all the time), but without strong evidence to assure people that hospital finances won’t be brutalized by a repeal of CON, it will be very difficult to refute VHHA claims.

The other element missing from the CON debate in Virginia is a compelling vision of what a health care industry driven by competition and innovation would look like. For all intents, the debate over Obamacare is not a debate about how to deliver better health care at lower cost but about who pays. It’s a zero sum game. Some people pay more, others pay less. The number of losers offset the number of winners. What we need is a win-win vision in which the health care industry reaps the same level of gains in economic productivity seen in the rest of the economy. To achieve those gains, the hospitals need to evolve from generalized institutions that do all things to medical institutions that focus on doing a few things well — focused factories that excel in productivity and quality of outcomes. Insofar as CON protects the status quo, it is the enemy of focused factories, the enemy of innovation and the enemy of productivity and quality.

Unfortunately, it has been years since anyone has championed the causes of health care productivity and quality in Virginia. It’s a cause that Virginia Republicans could take up — but haven’t. Unless CON repeal is bundled into a larger vision of restructuring the healthcare industry along market- and innovation-driven lines, I doubt the little CON-deregulation boomlet will get anywhere… and probably doesn’t deserve to.


Share this article



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)


Comments

9 responses to “Certificate of Need: A Bad Idea with Political Staying Power”

  1. re: ” The answer, of course, is that Virginia’s hospital lobby is extremely influential in Virginia.”

    well no. You were oh so close. The answer is the feckless hypocrisy of the Republican Party who claims one set of values and votes another.

    re: ” Thus, Virginia hospitals are stuck with the indigent patients but get no federal support.”

    They CHOSE to be stuck – Jim.

    and second – why are the indigent in Va the responsibility of the Feds and not the state to start with?

    this is the Alice-in-wonderland world of the right – who blame government – coming and going – and get away with it!

    Original MedicAid is – totally voluntary – but the GOP has no trouble taking that MedicAid .. why not reject it also?

    re: ” If we’re going to advance the cause of scrapping CON in Virginia, it is insufficient to repeat old, familiar — and politically ineffective — arguments. We need to dig deeper.”

    well first, we need to acknowledge the political hypocrisy that is at the core of it.

    Re: ” The other element missing from the CON debate in Virginia is a compelling vision of what a health care industry driven by competition and innovation would look like. ”

    then why in the H E L L would you REPEAL and have no competing REPLACE?

    re: ” or all intents, the debate over Obamacare is not a debate about how to deliver better health care at lower cost but about who pays. ”

    only if you insist on having blinders on.

    the number 1 tax expenditure in the Federal budget is the tax-free aspect of employer-provided health care – not to mention no FICA tax either, nor State Tax.

    then you get guaranteed coverage because the govt requires it

    and you also get community-rated premiums – again because the govt requires it.

    what exactly entitles you to the govt tax subsidies and protection rules in employer-provided? why do you get them and others do not for their non-employer-provided insurance?

  2. ” The other element missing from the CON debate in Virginia is a compelling vision of what a health care industry driven by competition and innovation would look like. ”

    You know – with all the help from ALEC and other Conservative groups like the Heritage, CATO land American Enterprise – you’d think by now – their would be …… something…. upon which to base a real response to the issue.

    this is what riles me up with the right these days.

    they’re pretty dang sure about what they don’t like and what they oppose – but they come up short – over and over – on the issues of the day and their solutions. They keep talking about “politics” as if that excuses the leadership on the right from making principled proposals..

    and here’s the thing – why would you oppose something – if you have no real viable alternative?

    and why would you gridlock the govt – if you don’t have a viable alternative?

    The right talks about “values” all the time – but what does it say about “values” when you have no ideas of your own – and you oppose other ideas?

    it’s time to get off the pot either do something constructive – or go sit down.

  3. The Republican Party of Virginia bears no resemblance to free market thinking. In most cases, the RPV bears no resemblance to any kind of thinking at all.

    I especially like the Medicaid expansion logic. Hospitals must provide indigent care. Somebody must pay for that care. The payment can come in the form of insurance or it can come from a Rube Goldberg economic maze involving the discretionary allowing of Certificates of Need in order to reduce supply and keep prices high.

    The RPV apparently prefers the latter. After all, there are only so many opportunities for politician payola with Medicaid expansion. However, randomly awarding Certificates of Need as a price inflation tool? Lordy, lordy – that a bonanza just waiting for the Imperial Clown Show in Richmond.

    1. TooManyTaxes Avatar
      TooManyTaxes

      There is no honest cost study that shows expanding Medicaid will produce lower costs than the status quo. There is some evidence from Senator Barker that expansion will help with uncompensated care, but there is also information from Washington State and Oregon that, even with managed care, ER usage is higher with Medicaid expansion than with the status quo. I recently read where the Oregon ER use was up 40%.

      If expansion is less expensive than the status quo, I support expansion. But one would need to show that the increase in Medicaid expenses to enroll and maintain expanded coverage is less than the costs for maintaining the status quo.

      And Larry the issue is not whether I have insurance or should feel guilty about my wife’s fringe benefits (which I don’t), but rather whether the promise of Democrats that Medicaid expansion will cost less than what we have today is true. Their refusal to address questions head on is evidence they know there will be no cost savings.

      I’ve asked a number of Democrats in the GA about this and only get answers that there will be cost savings and Oregon’s and Washington’s experiences won’t happen here. It seems to me that this is pure fraud, not unlike what Grubergate has exposed.

      1. re: ” There is no honest cost study that shows expanding Medicaid will produce lower costs than the status quo. There is some evidence from Senator Barker that expansion will help with uncompensated care, but there is also information from Washington State and Oregon that, even with managed care, ER usage is higher with Medicaid expansion than with the status quo. I recently read where the Oregon ER use was up 40%.”

        no study is going to tell you that TMT. and you continue to fail to see the difference between ER use – and what happens after the ER. EMTALA is not just ER – it’s ALL charity care the hospital provides… no matter what the ER use rate is.

        “If expansion is less expensive than the status quo, I support expansion. But one would need to show that the increase in Medicaid expenses to enroll and maintain expanded coverage is less than the costs for maintaining the status quo.”

        how would you ever actually know without doing it as a pilot for a number of years?

        “And Larry the issue is not whether I have insurance or should feel guilty about my wife’s fringe benefits (which I don’t), but rather whether the promise of Democrats that Medicaid expansion will cost less than what we have today is true. Their refusal to address questions head on is evidence they know there will be no cost savings.”

        you are getting insurance because the government is providing it to you – via the rules it has for employer-provided. Without those rules – the insurance company could deny you coverage or boost your premiums ..

        you are benefitting from government – and yet you deny that same benefit to others.

        How can you justify the inequitable and disparate treatment between you – and others not as lucky to have employer-provided or be married to someone who has access to employer-provided. What did you do to DESERVE the better treatment?

        “I’ve asked a number of Democrats in the GA about this and only get answers that there will be cost savings and Oregon’s and Washington’s experiences won’t happen here. It seems to me that this is pure fraud, not unlike what Grubergate has exposed.”

        the only “fraud” is people who get benefits from the govt but deny the same treatment for others – to continue to support and advocate for a system where the difference between the haves and have nots is mostly luck.. no matter how hard you work for a living.

        you’re essentially defending a status quo that is inequitable and discriminatory.

        as far as bending the cost curve. If you had had the opportunity to weigh in on Medicare – as it was being proposed – you probably would have opposed it, right?

        again – EMTALA renders moot your objections – because you believe that people who don’t have insurance don’t get medical care – beyond the ER – and that’s just not the case. When they don”t go to a doctor for months/years then show up at the ER with a heavily damaged cardiovascular system – they don’t die right away. They die after hundreds of thousands of dollars of treatment – that you are paying for.

        Do you doubt for a moment why we pay twice for health care than countries that provide regular access to primary care physicians when we do not?

        so you want proof positive that any changes will make the status quo improve?

        how would we EVER get ANY changes made under that rule?

        and where were you when Bush and the GOP expanded the subsidies from prescription drugs and Medicare Advantage? Did you oppose them also?

  4. We just recently had a second, competing hospital built in our area – the Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center and the approval of it was fought tooth and nail by the original hospital – Medicorp (aka Mary Washington).

    In the end – State regulators approved the new hospital but an interesting thing happened in that Mary Washington – then built a second hospital in North Stafford – and a new stand-alone ER and diagnostic imaging facility about a mile away from the new hospital.

    Not surprisingly, in the ensuing years – Mary Washington has lost money and last year had a significant lay-off to cut costs.

    but I’m not sure I believe the idea that hospitals can or do set charges – that are paid by customers. Most services are paid for by insurance companies and most insurance companies – I would think – are not going to pay more in the same city/locality/region at some hospitals and not others.

    I strongly suspect it works like Medicare and Medicare and the insurance companies decide how much they are going to pay – not the hospital – and I’m not sure they decide the amount they pay with regard to how many indigent people they serve… so the premise – unless substantiated is probably not true -but such premises seem par for the course for some of these “papers” that are generated by think tanks with a free-market agenda.

    In fact – the whole idea of blathering about free-market principles in a market that is primarily dominated by Medicare and Employer-provided health insurance is misguided… 99% of people do not pay for their own hospital services out of their own pocket – I suspect and therefore the number of people shopping and comparing – and thus engendering some semblance of free market principles is – tiny.

    Besides that – when your doctor or the ER folks tell you that you need an MRI or other procedure – tell me how many people are actually going to get on the phone or web to call around and check prices much less how many providers are going to actually provide a price quote?

    Over and over – the folks who insist that health care COULD or SHOULD be a free-market – refuse to deal with real world realities. There are no OECD countries that work this way. A few years back – many of the misguided who also were ignorant and uninformed were making bald-ass claims about Singapore until they were caught in a massive lie… and yes.. some of these conservative think tanks themselves – were actually caught propagandizing the lie and it was finding it’s way into the blogs and media outlets before it was exposed as untrue as Singapore is a tightly-controlled, govt run, insurance mandate place -not at all the free-market the posers were claiming.

    So the only places in the world where there is any semblance at all of a free-market health care system – are 3rd world countries -where those who don’t have money or insurance – die but that doesn’t stop the free-market folks in this country from continuing their belief-inspired advocacies.

    I am NOT opposed to free-market principles. I support dynamic pricing of airline reservations and toll roads. I support smart metering of electricity so people pay higher rates at high usage times. I support fees for school programs beyond core academic. I can go on and on – on this …

    and I’d support it for health care – if the hypocrites would be honest about it and that would mean that there would be no employer-provided, no Medicare, no TRICARE and no VA.

    People would get their compensation – including the military – and they would then go out into the marketplace like they do for other services, food, housing, cars, TVs, etc and get their health care.

    and I guarantee you that as soon as the Republicans proposed doing this to Americans – they’d be booted so fast and so far from elective office that they’d no even know what hit them.

    and they know this – so what they do instead is play games – like talking about patient-centered health care with free market principles or repealing CON laws.

    you’ll not hear even one of their scrawny butts advocating getting rid of EMTALA – not one. even as they blather on and on about free market principles and CON.

    Why am I so hard on the right?

    1. – we’ve been at this since Reagan and Bush I

    2. – the GOP – used to support individual mandates

    3. – they ADDED to Medicare with subsidized prescription drugs AND Medicare Advantage (which is going to bankrupt the country).

    4. – they allow MEDICAID in Virginia to be used to pay for nursing homes for being wo own their own homes.

    5. – they allow people who have over 85K in retirement income get Medicare for 105.00 a month.

    6.- they oppose subsidies for Obamacare but are fine with subsidies for employer-provided.

    7. – they allow commercial insurers to deny coverage to people with pre-existing conditions – in the free market -but they stand by why the govt prohibits that same thing for people who have employer-provided.

    I’m not going to 10 but I could – but the bottom line is that the folks on the right – are corrupt and hypocritical when it comes to health care.

    and yet – with the help of the think tanks and right wing echo chamber – they have successfully sold a bill of goods to the gullible… and that’s what wins the day in our legislators – and that’s what lets the Va GOP turn down MedicAid Expansion even though it harms Virginia and harms Virginians.

    we got the govt we deserve… and it’s bad – and we are clueless about it.

  5. TooManyTaxes Avatar
    TooManyTaxes

    CONs are a carry over from the regulation of a monopoly service, e.g., telephone, electric, etc. The goal was to prevent wasteful investment that was recoverable in utility rates based on rate-of-return regulation. Section 214 of the federal Communications Act still provides for a requirement for a carrier to build new interstate lines. The FCC grants carriers blanket authority to construct and operate interstate lines. Because of security concerns, carriers must still obtain authority to construct and operate international lines. Cancelation still requires FCC approval.

    The Virginia law no longer makes sense and should be repealed.

    1. re: ” CONs are a carry over….”

      well if you look at the map in the report that Jim references – there are a lot of states that don’t have CON… but did not recall seeing how many – just never had CON and others which got rid of.

      but I think, by definition, CON is looking at a service that is funded by tax dollars or in some way is a service that is not a pure private, free market service.

      WalMart does not need a CON – they have their own way of deciding “need”.

      and I think when it comes to hospitals and the like now days – they don’t decide how much they will charge.. it’s the other way around – the insurance companies determine how much the service is “worth” and that’s what they will pay – and Medicare reimbursements rates drive the process… most insurance now looks to see what Medicare reimburses and uses that as a benchmark.

      The study that Jim referenced also found no bright-line differences between states with CON and without it in terms of numbers of indigent or costs overall.. I believe.

  6. in terms of health care for indigents and it’s effect on the various pieces and parts of the health care system to include certificate of need…

    the thing that trumps everything else – and substantially drives other issues is EMTALA – it’s the law that requires hospitals to provide care to anyone regardless of their ability to pay.

    it does not allow hospitals to turn folks away even if they have huge numbers of indigent – or huge costs for indigents – beyond the ER – like cardiovascular or cancer treatment, surgeries, etc.. and it does not matter if the hospital is going broke to provide that care.

    so basically the indigent (and that INCLUDES those who may actually have a full-time job but no health insurance) – will avoid getting regular care, not even know if they are suffering from preventable or manageable disease – just wait until they are in trouble – then they go to the ER.

    so – it’s NOT just ER visits that are at issue – it’s what happens AFTER the ER visit if the individual gets admitted, stays in the hospital, needs surgery or MRIs , radiation, etc… that’s the largely unrecognized costs.

    So once you have EMTALA embedded in our health care system – the costs of the indigent are incorporated into the costs to operate the hospitals and other facilities and since most communities cannot do without their health care facilities – they have to either receive government subsidies or find some way to shift costs to those who do have private insurance or can pay out of pocket.

    As long as EMTALA is the law of the land – people believing that the indigent do not use medical facilities are essentially in denial of the realities.

    and it’s worse than just believing they’re not using the facilities; because they often do not get regular care – their diseases have not been detected or managed but instead have progressed to the point where heroic and hugely costly treatments are provided.

    So whether it’s CON or other issues in health care – nothing is going to fix it short of getting rid of EMTALA and if we cannot do that – then basically our system is driven by EMTALA no matter how much we try to pretend otherwise. All the roads lead right back to EMTALA.

Leave a Reply