I skimmed the article, but it seems like they hired an economist to set up a state wide Health Maintenance Organization where the coupling of payment and services is tied to the state government (instead of a 'private' entity) and physicians are still rewarded for staying below the allocated amount paid for each individual into the coupled system (a point often masked by the guise of 'preventive care, avoiding the 'unnecessary' additional tests in a fee-for-service model, and allowing the PCP to act as the gateway for specialization care').
I could be missing something (I'll probably read the full article later), but I don't see how expanding a HMO program on a statewide level is going to reign in any sort of costs or efficiency when a. patients generally have issues with government intervention into health care and b. the exodus from HMO MCO plans to PPO MCO plans within the past decade has been enormous and attributed to a general dislike of the restrictions placed on HMO patients and the highly interrelated relationship between non-clinician, financial roles in determining care.
Historically, HMO plans (and various other forms of Managed Care Organization theories) haven't played out well at all. Additionally, I'm unsure if the system has built in enough fail safes to avoid abuse and spiraling costs. Furthermore, I'd also be interested to see if the 65+ residents (again, this could have been covered in the article) are covered under this plan, as the medicare group is notorious for uncontrollable costs.
Frankly, I'd predict that the plan will fail, and, more immediately, I'd guess that there will be some sort of backlash and it will never get off the ground in a large format.
Although I'm very conservative on the issue, it's abundantly clear that the current model needs big tweaks and these types of experiments are interesting to say the least. I'll definitely be interested to see how this plays out. Thanks for the update Lok.