![]() |
Bargaining power |
UCOP seems willing to accept the idea that $40 million will be saved by switching to a privatized system with no appreciable degradation of the offerings. Somehow, more for less - or, at least, the same for less - is supposedly being offered. When asked how such magic is possible, UCOP representatives say that maybe the carriers will get the extra money from Medicare and pass it along to UC. But, they say, since the system is privatized, UCOP cannot really know where the cost cut comes from. Nonsense! Ask! And say there will be no deal if a credible explanation is not offered, one that can be shared with participants.

"High-quality evidence does not currently exist concerning how, if at all, medical necessity decisions differ between traditional Medicare and MA PPOs."
Source: https://files.constantcontact.com/0c822253501/fc0386ad-a1c7-4d7c-a6ee-0523240d4cec.pdf

It isn't the little frills, plus or minus, that participants are worried about. What they want is to avoid horror stories, such as appear from time to time in the news media about reimbursements being denied because, say, someone sent to an emergency room in an ambulance didn't call for a second opinion. UCOP needs to use its bargaining power to avoid horror stories.
To this point, there is little to indicate that UCOP is engaged in true bargaining from strength. And the timetable for the runaway train - i.e., implementation by January 1, 2020 - suggests there is little time left to do so.
=====
*Past postings on this subject:
https://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2019/06/silo-thinking-and-runaway-train-on.html
http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2019/06/yet-more-on-retiree-healthcare-runaway.html
http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2019/06/footnote-on-runaway-retiree-healthcare.html
http://uclafacultyassociation.blogspot.com/2019/06/timetable-of-runaway-train-on-retiree.html [Includes previous links.]
No comments:
Post a Comment