On July 7, 2021

OneCare is not the problem with Vermont’s health care

Dear Editor,

Blaming OneCare for the high cost of health care and the sluggish pace of reform grabs headlines, but it does not serve the public or advance understanding of our health care system and its impact on our lives and economy.

OneCare establishes per capita contracts, disburses funds, and aggregates and analyzes data in an ongoing effort to transform the delivery and financing of health care. It has brought 13 hospitals together in an unprecedented commitment to a fixed payment model. This is an enormous step forward.

But OneCare does not regulate or deliver health care. It is but one of many moving parts and interested parties. Many other moving parts have avoided scrutiny.

Gov. Phil Scott, for one, should be leading on this issue, not observing from the sidelines, content to let an unprecedented opportunity flounder. And then there is the Green Mountain Care Board, a powerful regulatory body with little stomach for regulating. If members of this board would make better use of the power invested in them, results will follow — flak no doubt too, but results nonetheless.

OneCare has no such clout and so cannot be saddled with the failure to use it. What it does have as an accountable care organization is a broad view of the health care system as a whole, which — together with explicit data on treatment and outcomes — makes a more efficient, effective and, yes, accountable health care system possible — coordinating and delivering care in better ways. This is not easy, but it is not OneCare that is making it difficult.

Beloved but untenable small hospitals and many physicians in private practice, not to mention Blue Cross Blue Shield, and many self-insured businesses are wedded to fee-for-service and threatened by a transition to per capita healthcare funding. They are dragging their feet while OneCare is pushing forward.

Fee-for-service is the problem. It incentivizes procedures over health and outcomes. It is the reason health care in the U.S. is the most expensive, but not the most effective.  Vermont handled the pandemic as well as it did in large measure because of consistent leadership and no saboteurs. If we want high-quality health care at a fair price and if we don’t want health care costs to overwhelm us, we need leadership and unity on this one.

Michael Long, Burlington

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Homeless legislation encounters Sturm and Drang

May 7, 2025
A cohort of Vermont’s social service providers has embarked on an editorial campaign challenging the House’s recent legislation that would disrupt the status quo of homeless services funding administration. Angus Chaney, executive director of Rutland’s Homeless Prevention Center (HPC), appears to be the author of the editorial and is joined by about a dozen fellow…

From incarceration to community care: Reinvest in health, justice, common good

May 7, 2025
By Brian Cina Editor’s note: Brian Cina is a VermontState Representative for Chittenden-15. Cina is a clinical social worker with a full-time therapy practice and is a part-time crisis clinician. State-sanctioned punishment and violence perpetuate harm under the guise of accountability, justice, and public safety. Since 2017, Governor Phil Scott has pushed for new prisons…

Tech, nature are out of synch

May 7, 2025
Dear Editor, I have been thinking since Earth Day about modern technology and our environment and how much they are out of touch with each other.  Last summer, my wife and I traveled to Fairbanks, Alaska, for a wedding. While there, we went to the Museum of the North at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. It…

Under one roof: Vermont or bust!

May 7, 2025
Dear Editor, We’re heading north and so excited. We’re moving full time to Vermont! For decades we’ve been snow birds, like my parents, spending half the year in Bradenton, Florida. But now our Florida house is up for sale — a 1929 Spanish Mediterranean brimming with beauty and charm. A young family we hope will…