Medicare is
a national health insurance program which provides health insurance for
Americans aged 65 and older, and those who are disabled or have specific chronic
conditions. Medicare covers 17 percent of the U.S. population, including the
nation’s oldest, sickest, and most disabled citizens. Medicare has achieved two
important goals: ensuring access to health care for elderly and disabled
citizens, and protection from the financial risks associated with health care. By ensuring access, Medicare has contributed
to a five-year increase in life expectancy after age 65.
Before implementation
of Medicare in 1966, 48 percent of Americans 65 and older had no insurance;
today, that figure hovers at 2 percent. Older Americans used to cover 56% of
their health care expenses directly out-of-pocket, today, they pay only 13
percent. Medicare is funded through a
combination of a payroll tax, beneficiary premiums, co-pays and deductibles,
and U.S. Treasury revenue; it is administered by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS.)
Medicare is
divided into four Parts. Part A covers hospital costs, skilled nursing, and
hospice services. Part B covers physician and other clinical outpatient
services. For both A and B, there are
copays and deductibles, as well as gaps in insurance coverage. There are no annual out-of-pocket spending
limits for Parts A and B, therefore supplemental coverage, known as Part C,
protects from financial hardship.
Medicare has
significantly improved the well-being of citizens over 65 years of age.
The single
greatest threat to long-term survival of the Medicare Program is runaway costs,
an issue which must be addressed before expanding the program to all of us. Between
1970 and 2013, spending per Medicare beneficiary increased 500 percent from
$385 to $12,210, or 0.7 to 3.5 percent of GDP. Current projections predict that Medicare
spending will make up 5.1 percent of GDP by 2030.
At the same
time, researchers at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical
Practice estimated 30
percent of all Medicare spending and could be avoided without worsening clinical
outcomes. According to the Congressional Budget Office, eliminating this waste could
save as much as $700
billion annually.
Some
bipartisan measures that might contain costs include: funding additional primary
care physician residency positions, eliminating accountable care organizations,
and allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical companies.
First, the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 capped the number of residency slots in teaching
hospitals which were eligible for Medicare payments. This mistake has facilitated
a shortage of primary care physicians across the country. A larger supply of primary care physicians is
associated with a lower mortality rate. In fact, adding 10 primary care
physicians per 100 000 population increases life expectancy by nearly two
months, whereas the same increase in specialty physicians only improves life
expectancy by 19 days. U.S. Senators Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), John Boozman
(R-Ark.) and Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) introduced the Physician Shortage Reduction
Act of 2019 to increase Medicare-supported doctor training slots by 15,000. Investing in primary care reduces overall
expenditures by lessening morbidity and mortality; at the same time, this
legislation would address the physician shortage and improve access to care for
patients.
Second, in
2008, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) warned Congress that Accountable
Care Organizations (ACO) would not save Medicare dollars, yet the Affordable
Care Act required CMS to establish them within Medicare. ACO’s—similar to HMO’s –use narrow networks
in an attempt to control cost yet bear considerable financial risk, because pay
is on a per-enrollee basis with the obligation to provide all medically
necessary services for enrollees.
After nearly
a decade, studies consistently demonstrate that ACOs fail to achieve cost
reduction, just as predicted. Universal
care plans must strike a balance between a free market and government
regulation necessary to protect patients. By eliminating the ACO construct, patients and
private businesses will flourish.
And finally,
federal law prohibits Medicare from negotiating prices for prescription drugs
with pharmaceutical companies in order to reduce costs for nearly 43 million
seniors enrolled in Medicare Part D. U.S.
Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) have reintroduced
the Empowering Medicare Seniors to Negotiate Drug Prices Act. Enabling the
federal government to negotiate for reduced drug prices is a policy supported
by a majority of Democrats (96%), Republicans (92%), and Independents (92%).
Over the
last 50 years, Medicare has improved the delivery of healthcare services for
nearly one-fifth of the U.S. population.
Cost containment must be coupled with implementation of Medicare For
All. Without it, universal access will
be unsustainable.
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