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Health care reform legislation : economic implications for rural small businesses and the rural economy : hearing before the Subcommittee on the Development of Rural Enterprises, Exports, and the Environment of the Committee on Small Business, House of Re PDF

116 Pages·1994·3.2 MB·English
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Preview Health care reform legislation : economic implications for rural small businesses and the rural economy : hearing before the Subcommittee on the Development of Rural Enterprises, Exports, and the Environment of the Committee on Small Business, House of Re

Yy HEALTH CARE REFORM LEGISLATION: ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS FOR RURAL SMALL BUSINESSES AND THE RURAL ECONOMY Y4.BM 1:103-97 Health Care Reforn Legislation: Eco... HEAKING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL ENTERPRISES, EXPORTS, AND THE ENVIRONMENT OF THE COMMITTEE ON SMALL BUSINESS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED THIRD CONGRESS SECOND SESSION WASHINGTON, DC, JULY 28, 1994 Printed for the use of the Committee on Small Business Serial No. 103-97 JAH r %5 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 81-952CC WASHINGTON : 1994 ForsalebytheU.S.GovernmentPrintingOffice SuperintendentofDocuments.CongressionalSalesOffice,Washington,DC 20402 ISBN 0-16-046133-2 v/ . HEALTH CARE REFORM LEGISLATION: ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS FOR RURAL SMALL BUSINESSES AND THE RURAL ECONOMY Y 4. BH 1: 103-97 Health Care Reforn Legislation: Eco. . HEAKING BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL ENTERPRISES, EXPORTS, AND THE ENVIRONMENT OF THE COMMITTEE ON SMALL BUSINESS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ONE HUNDRED THIRD CONGRESS SECOND SESSION WASHINGTON, DC, JULY 28, 1994 Printed for the use of the Committee on Small Business Serial No. 103-97 ^ J 4# 1 n U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 81-952CC WASHINGTON : 1994 ForsalebytheU.S.GovernmentPrintingOffice SuperintendentofDocuments,CongressionalSalesOffice,Washington,DC 20402 ISBN 0-16-046133-2 COMMITTEE ON SMALL BUSINESS JOHN J. LaFALCE, New York, Chairman NEAL SMITH, Iowa JAN MEYERS, Kansas IKE SKELTON, Missouri LARRY COMBEST, Texas ROMANO L. MAZZOLI, Kentucky RICHARD H. BAKER, Louisiana RON WYDEN, Oregon JOEL HEFLEY, Colorado NORMAN SISISKY, Virginia RONALD K. MACHTLEY, Rhode Island JOHN CONYERS, JR., Michigan JIM RAMSTAD, Minnesota JAMES H. BILBRAY, Nevada SAM JOHNSON, Texas KWEISI MFUME, Maryland WILLIAM H. ZELIFF, JR., New Hampshire FLOYD H. FLAKE, New York MICHAEL A. "MAC" COLLINS, Georgia BILL SARPALIUS, Texas SCOTT McINNlS, Colorado GLENN POSHARD, Illinois MICHAEL HUFFINGTON, California EVA M. CLAYTON, North Carolina JAMES M. TALENT, Missouri MARTIN T. MEEHAN, Massachusetts JOE KNOLLENBERG, Michigan PAT DANNER, Missouri JAY DICKEY, Arkansas TED STRICKLAND, Ohio JAY KIM, California NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ, New York DONALD A. MANZULLO, Illinois CLEO FIELDS, Louisiana PETER G. TORKILDSEN, Massachusetts MARJORIE MARGOLIES-MEZVINSKY, ROB PORTMAN, Ohio Pennsylvania WALTER R. TUCKER III, California RON KLINK, Pennsylvania LUCILLE ROYBAL-ALLARD, California EARL F. HILLIARD, Alabama H. MARTIN LANCASTER, North Carolina THOMAS H. ANDREWS, Maine MAXINE WATERS, California BENNIE G. THOMPSON, Mississippi JEANNE M. RoslaNOWICK, StaffDirector JENIFER LOON, Minority StaffDirector SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL ENTERPRISES, EXPORTS, AND THE Environment GLENN POSHARD, Illinois, Chairman BILL SARPALIUS, Texas JOEL HEFLEY, Colorado EVA M CLAYTON, North Carolina JIM RAMSTAD, Minnesota PAT DANNER Missouri DONALD A. MANZULLO, Illinois TED STRICKLAND, Ohio MICHAEL A. "MAC" COLLINS, Georgia BENNIE G. THOMPSON, Mississippi BRIAN AHLBERG, Subcommittee StaffDirector BRIAN REARDON, Minority Subcommittee Professional StaffMember (ID CONTENTS Page HearingheldonJuly 28, 1994 1 WITNESSES Thursday, July 28, 1994 Fluharty, Charles, director, Rural Policy Research Institute (RUPRI), University ofMissouri 5 McBride, Tim, assistant professor ofeconomics, Public Policy and Geron- tology, University ofMissouri 6 Mueller, Keith, director, Nebraska Center for Rural Health Research, University ofNebraska Medical Center 8 APPENDIX Opening statements: Hefley, Hon. Joel , 34 Poshard, Hon. Glenn 36 Prepared statements: Fluharty, Charles 38 McBride, Timothy 40 Additional material: Williams, Hon. Pat 45 TheRural Perspective on National Health Reform Legislation 47 (III) HEALTH CARE REFORM LEGISLATION: ECO- NOMIC IMPLICATIONS FOR RURAL SMALL BUSINESSES AND THE RURAL ECONOMY THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1994 House of Representatives, Subcommittee on the Development of Rural Enterprises, Exports, and the Environment, Committee on Small Business, Washington, DC. The subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 2 p.m., in room 2359-A, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Glenn Poshard (chairman ofthe subcommittee) presiding. Chairman Poshard. The Subcommittee on Rural Enterprises, Exports and the Environment will come to order. Today's hearing will examine the economic implications of health care reform legis- lation for rural small businesses and the rural economy. In our first meeting we asked the folks who are with us today to come back when they had completed their examination of the various health care bills that are before the Congress and to help us better understand the economic impact of those bills on the rural economy today. That is what this hearing will be about. The debate has entered into a crucial stage here on Capitol Hill and across the country. One result of arriving at that stage is the current efforts of the majority leadership here in the House to craft a new bill that can pass and that can achieve the President's major reform goals: Universal coverage and cost containment. As rural advocates, many of us have felt in recent months that we have had some significant success. We have included provisions important to rural America in the reform bills that have moved through the various committees. Now, as it appears that a new bill is emerging and likely will be the bill that the House will finally consider, we feel it is necessary to maintain our profile as advo- cates for rural communities. It is important to remind our colleagues that the special condi- tions and problems of rural communities will require certain spe- cial provisions. Rural communities stand to gain a great deal from the reform of the country's health care system, especially from re- form that does deliver on the promise of universal coverage. Rural communities might even benefit relatively more from reform than other communities ifreform is done properly. But the way we do reform could also pose new threats to the We rural communities and their health care delivery systems. will hear about both the threats and the opportunities today. (l) This hearing follows one that the subcommittee conducted on June 23. As I mentioned, a bill has been introduced by Representa- tives Stenholm and Roberts, of which I am an original cosponsor. A number ofimportant provisions ofthat bill were included in H.R. 3600, the Ways and Means Committee bill, and some of us are working to see if we can get those provisions included in this new majority bill. Today, we will focus on findings of analysis carried out by the Rural Policy Research Institute on health care reform and the rural economy. The academic experts that RUPRI has assembled through its research panels have made invaluable contributions to the health care debate already this year. RUPRI analysis and rec- ommendations were the basis of much of the bipartisan rural bill I mentioned earlier, and RUPRI economists provided important tes- timony at our first hearing, as they have before other committees around the hill. RUPRI economists conducted a very interesting and useful brief- ing in the Cannon Building just last week for our rural health care caucus and rural caucus members. I. point out that this is an independent collection of economists, and I believe a range of ideological views have been taken into ac- count in the consensus documents that you folks have produced. We appreciate that. I think your reports show that you are purely nonpartisan. Ofcourse, we are interested today in RUPRI's most recent analy- sis found in this document that our Members each have a copy of now, and we are particularly interested in the implications oftheir findings for the still-evolving proposal that we in the House will soon consider. If I can steal our witness's thunder to make one point, it is this: RUPRI—economists believe that health care reform —done properly, I think and we will get into this in some discussion with univer- sal coverage, will benefit rural America's economy, will benefit its health delivery system and will, on the whole, benefit rural small firms. I hope our hearing can clarify how rural America is faring so far in the legislative process. I hope the testimony can help explain how the still-changing reform proposals will likely affect rural com- munities. I hope the hearing can help us determine what are the important next steps for rural advocates. The subcommittee knows Mr. Fluharty, who is director ofRUPRI and who is based at the University of Missouri, and we are very happy to have him here today. We want to welcome Dr. McBride of the University of Missouri and Dr. Mueller, who is director of the Nebraska Center for Rural Health Research. I am very pleased th—at we have both the RUPRI expert panels represented here today the economics panel and the health deliv- ery system panel. We thank you for coming, and I will turn now to my colleague, Mr. Hefley for any opening statement. [Chairman Poshard's statement may be found in the appendix.! Mr. Hefley. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciated your opening statement. You point out one factor that I think we should take note of; the bipartisan rural health care bill. I think that is very important, that that be a bipartisan bill. We made that point when we had the hearings on it here the other day. Then you mentioned the Majority Leadership bill, which is being drafted in both the House and the Senate right now, which is being done in secret, has no Republican participation whatsoever, prob- ably will get no Republican support whatsoever, while the leader- ship on the Republican side of the aisle has been pleading with the majority to let's sit down and try to work this out in a bipartisan way. It is a sad commentary I think on our process when we are deal- ing with something as important as this is that it has to be done that way and that there is a crisis attitude not because of a crisis in health care but a crisis that the election is coming up and we cannot go to the voters without a health care bill. I think that is rather sad. But I am glad we are here today, and I think the efforts to re- form the health care system is moving, as the Chairman says, into a crucial stage. I share his concerns that rural health care issues should receive more attention, though perhaps not for the same reasons. I see our rural areas as the first test, kind of the canary in th'e coal mine, if you will, of health care reform success. I say that for two reasons: First, rural areas are always hardest hit by government man- dates, whether its be minimum wage, Davis-Bacon requirements, other Federal laws which raise the cost of labor and retard rural economic development. For some advocates ofthese laws, you could argue that that was the intended purpose, to protect high-cost labor against competition from low-cost labor. But whether it was their purpose or not it seems to be the result. I suspect employer mandates will have the—same kind of result. Areas—with low costs and labor-intensive jobs rural areas, in other words will shoulder a large portion of the burden. Employers in those areas do not have the resources necessary to cope with an- other wage tax and employees will be laid off. I suggest that having health insurance is small consolation for someone without food on their table and a roofover their head. Second, rural health care problems pose the greatest hurdle to health care reform. Rural areas have large populations of unin- sured low-income people. If we are going to live up to the Presi- dent's promise of universal coverage, we need to solve health care that is facing the rural areas. In that respect, I have before me a study conducted by the Na- tional Center for Policy Analysis conducted in 1991 which looks at rural health care availability around the world. One conclusion I draw from that study is that rural health care concerns are univer- sal. The problems facing my constituents in eastern Colorado are similar to those experienced in northern Canada or along the Rhine in Germany: Limited access, no specialists, poor equipment and on and on. The other conclusion I draw is that national health care is no so- lution to rural health care problems. Consider the following find- ings: People living in British Columbia's two largest cities receive 55 percent more specialist services per capita than rural residents. British Columbia's urban residents are 5Vz times more likely to re- ceive services from a thoracic surgeon, 3V2 times more likely to see a psychiatrist, 2V2 times more likely to receive services from a der- matologist, anesthesiologist or a plastic surgeon. After 40 years of national health care, people in rural England still have to travel to urban areas to access CAT scans and other modern medical technology. In Norway, residents of Oslo are 15 times more likely to see a specialist than people living in the northern part ofthe country. In Brazil's free health care system, urban residents see doctors nine times more often than rural residents. Venezuela promises free health care to everyone, but all of Ven- ezuela's free health care clinics are located in large cities. In Mexico, where free health care is a constitutional right, 85 percent of the health care resources are consumed by 35 percent of the population, mostly residing in large cities. In other words, universal access is a myth. You can promise it, but you cannot deliver it. Worse, government intervention in these countries has reduced the quality of the care their citizens receive. Consider that both Canada and England have severely limited the access to such lifesaving procedures as open heart surgery and brain scans. In conclusion, let us no—t lose sight of—the forest for the trees. Peo- ple living in rural areas by definition have less access to most of the services we take for granted in urban areas, including health care. If they had the same access they would not be living in rural areas. They make this decision when they move to those rural areas. This fact of rural life poses special problems that we need to tackle in order to ensure health care availability for our rural pop- ulation. For the reasons I stated above, however, increasing the role ofgovernment in our health care system I firmly believe is not the solution. To the contrary, I think the report is clear that excessive govern- ment involvement exacerbates those problems, lowering access to care while reducing its quality. To suggest otherwise is to ignore the experiences of Canada, England and other countries that have experimented with national health care. Once again, I would thank the Chairman for holding this hear- ing, and I look forward to the testimony ofthe panel. Chairman Poshard. I wish the minority leader on the committee felt a little more strongly about his position. Thank you, Mr. Hefley. [Mr. Hefley's statement may be found in the appendix.] Chairman Poshard. Well, Mr. Fluharty, we shall begin with you. We are going to allow all three of you to make your presentation in whatever fashion you deem appropriate, and then, hopefully, we will be able to give you a lot ofquestions to answer for us.

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