Mass. Briefs To Supreme Court: ‘Hey, Health Reform Works For Us’

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Have you filed your Obamacare amicus brief yet? What? You haven’t? Then you’re way behind your fellow Americans — at least those in organizations with a dog in this fight. The Supreme Court is expected to consider Obamacare — better known as the Affordable Care Act or the federal health care overhaul — in March, and the deadline for some of the amicus briefs in support of the government was Friday. (“Amicus” = friend in Latin. Amicus brief: An argument from someone with a strong interest in the case, but who is not actually a party to the legal action.)

A few highlights on the Supreme Court’s “friends” in Massachusetts:

• Attorney General Martha Coakley filed her brief on Friday. From the press release:

BOSTON – Arguing that Massachusetts’ own experience supports the federal government’s basis for passing national health care reform, Attorney General Martha Coakley filed a brief today in the U.S. Supreme Court supporting the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).

Massachusetts’ health care reform law served as a blueprint for the PPACA. In her brief, the Attorney General argues that the successful results from the Massachusetts law enacted in 2006, including a reduction of the number of uninsured people utilizing the “free-care” pool (so-called “free riders”), demonstrate that Congress had a rational and constitutional basis to enact an individual coverage requirement in PPACA.

“Since implementing health care reform, Massachusetts has seen many tangible benefits,” said Attorney General Coakley. “Over 98% of Massachusetts citizens are insured and the amount of so-called ‘free care’ has dropped by hundreds of millions of dollars. The benefits of health care reform in Massachusetts – passed with bi-partisan support –are a clear basis for which Congress chose to address the health care crisis on a national level.”

• Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts sent over word that it, too, filed its amicus brief on Friday. In an accompanying letter, Blue Cross chief Andrew Dreyfus writes about the individual mandate, the requirement that virtually everyone have health insurance:

It is widely acknowledged that Massachusetts reform served as a model for the national law. As the state’s largest private health plan that has been operating in a reformed market for several years, we believe it’s important to share with the Court our insights and experiences.

As you’ll see in the attached 18-page brief, we devote special attention to the individual mandate, which is the central constitutional question now at issue before the Court.

Our experience here in Massachusetts demonstrates that the mandate is an essential element to overall reform. The successes of the Massachusetts law – the lowest uninsured rate in the nation, increased access to and use of preventive care, and lower health insurance premiums for individuals – would not have been possible without the mandate. For this reason, we have urged the Court to affirm the constitutionality of the mandate in the national law.

• Prof. Kevin Outterson, director of the health law program at Boston University, is tracking the briefs on The Incidental Economist, and notes in this post that Massachusetts health care reform groups including Health Care For All have also filed their brief in support of the government.

He writes:

Many of the Massachusetts groups most involved in the Commonwealth’s historic 2006 health reforms have jointly authored a brief that supports the constitutionality of the minimum coverage provision under the Commerce Clause.

While the Massachusetts reforms have been remarkably successful, Massachusetts’s experience with health reform demonstrates that health care and health insurance are inherently interstate activities that cannot be comprehensively regulated without federal involvement.

States attempting to act on their own will face barriers such as uninsured and underinsured patients from other states, as well as federal laws such as ERISA that limit the ability of states to regulate health insurance offered within the state.

Amici:  Health Care For All; Health Law Advocates; The Massachusetts Hospital Association; The Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers; the Greater Boston Interfaith Organization; and Community Catalyst. Counsel of Record: Wendy Parmet, Northeastern Law.

Prof. Outterson rounds up not only those who have filed but also the health care players that are thus far remaining silent. This Friday post of his lists the many briefs from supporters, and in today’s post he includes a list of “Missing:

•All other insurance companies (in the 4th Cir. case, AHIP filed on behalf of neither party, in essence on severability)
•The vast majority of peak medical societies (AMA & most specialty societies have sat this fight out)
•Fortune 500 (unless you count NFIB/CoC; the National Restaurant Assn filed against the ACA on severability)
•Drug and device companies (unless you count Washington Legal Foundation, who filed below against the MCP; and the Pacific Legal Foundation, who filed below on standing)

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, he said, was the only insurance company to file in support of the government’s minimum coverage provision by Friday’s deadline. Deadlines for briefs on other points come next month, he noted, so there could be another wave of filings.

For a full list of amicus (amici?) briefs, he pointed me to the “ACA litigation blog” here.

On the Massachusetts briefs, Prof. Outterson — who worked on the Health Care For All brief — commented: “They told a very consistent, complimentary story, that Massachusetts has really remarkably reduced the uninsurance rate but a lot of the funds for it came out of the federal Medicaid waiver, so it’s not like the state did it totally by itself.”

“It’s clear,” he continued, “that the individual mandate in Massachusetts helps significantly, so that’s good news for the federal side. And if a state tried to do it completely on its own, without federal help, they’d be prone to all sorts of issues, including uninsured people from other states coming across the borders. So the line from all the supporters is that Massachusetts has done a great job — it shows the individual mandate helps — but nobody’s claiming that Massachusetts could have done it completely by itself.”

Overall, Prof. Outterson said, he applauds Blue Cross for filing in support of health reform, and points out that hospitals have also come out in favor of reform. “The missing voices,” he said, “are the AMA [American Medical Association], which has just been dead silent. Most of the medical societies haven’t said a word. Pharama has been quiet, and the device industry has been quiet, so it’s interesting who’s sitting it out.”

  • Dennis Byron

    I have only read Ms. Coakley’s brief and it is based on a major misreading of the statistics – or a purposeful deception —  that is sort of reflected in these words in her press release:


    “…the successful results from the Massachusetts law enacted in 2006, including a reduction of the number of uninsured people utilizing the “free-care” pool (so-called “free riders”), demonstrate that Congress had a rational and constitutional basis to enact an individual coverage requirement in PPACA.”


    The words free as in “free care pool” and free as in “free rider” do not mean the same thing.


    RomneyCare has added 350,000-450,000 net newly insured people (the exact number is by definition a moving target) to the insurance rolls in Massachusetts and few were “free riders.”  Free riders would be people who
    1. could afford insurance but
    2. chose not to buy it and
    3. then went to a hospital and applied for free care through the old free care pool
    (Presumably, if there really are any of these mythical free riders, they are in the 2% to 5% that still won’t buy insurance).

    About half of the “new” 400,000 (out of 6,500,000 of us) were always eligible for Medicaid and never could have afforded healthcare insurance and would never have had to pay for health insurance anyways if they had simply signed up for Medicaid even before RomneyCare. Almost all the rest are poor residents just above the Medicaid threshold who could not have previously afforded Massachusetts’ high premiums and still can’t. Instead they now – in theory — receive insurance for free or highly subsidized instead of having to use the free care pool.


    On the matter of these added insured individual and their effect on the free care pool in dollar terms, Ms. Coakley left out the fact that Gov. Romney’s plan was that the free care pool should have — in theory — effectively gone to zero from $700 million, not just to just under $500 million as it in the Health Safety Net’s most recent fiscal year report. Nor do the ‘savings’ numbers she quoted take into account that the legislature regularly underfunds its share of the pool. As a result the true cost of uncompensated care that she quoted to the Supreme Court is understated. Ms. Coakley also neglects to tell the Supreme Court justices about the cost of RomneyCare to the Federal government and Massachusetts taxpayers in other parts of the state budget, particularly in Medicaid and Commonwealth Care.


    (I’ll leave the premise that “Massachusetts gave a lot of free and highly subsidized insurance away to people that wanted insurance and therefore it is constitutional to make people who don’t want insurance buy it” to the lawyers.)