Moving away from "sick care" to "health care"...
For the health policy world, the Supreme Court's tough questioning of the individual mandate last week was a seismic event.
But in Hartford, Conn., the city sometimes called the epicenter of the insurance industry, David Cordani isn't quaking.
Cordani
is the CEO of Cigna, the nation's fourth-largest health insurer. He
says the insurance industry started changing itself before the
Affordable Care Act became law in 2010. And the changes will continue
regardless of what happens at the high court.
"The
broader health care debate is way larger than the individual mandate,"
Cordani said during an interview in his sunny corner office, just a few
hours after some of the justices seemed ready to strike down the mandate.
Cigna,
like the broader insurance industry, hasn't taken a position on whether
or not the mandate requiring Americans to buy health coverage is
constitutional. Cordani points out that it really only deals with
expanding care to people in the small-group and individual markets.
That's a fraction of the total number of people insured, and it's not a
major market for Cigna.
Cordani says
the act does a fair enough job at expanding access to care, but it
doesn't do as much to improve the quality of care and drive down costs.
That's his focus: changing the way we think about insurance, from paying
for "sick care" to paying for "health care," driving consumers to stay
healthy and giving doctors incentives to keep them that way.
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