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Health Reform: Guaranteeing Medicare’s future while protecting older adults and people with disabilities. Strengthening Medicare and benefiting enrollees.
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Health Reform:Guaranteeing Medicare’s future while protecting older adults and people with disabilities
Strengthening Medicare and benefiting enrollees We don’t have to ask older and disabled Americans to pay more for their health care to reduce the federal deficit. There are smarter ways to strengthen Medicare.Health care reform slowed the growth of Medicare spending without cutting benefits for older adults and people with disabilities.
Declining Obligations Health care reform reduced the projected gap in Medicare’s finances, strengthening the program’s hospital insurance trust fund: Source: Annual reports of the Boards of Trustees of the Federal Hospital Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Funds, 2003-2011. Note: Projected unfunded liability for the Medicare HI trust fund decreased significantly in 2010 as a result of the Affordable Care Act, which enacted payment and delivery system reforms and increased the contribution level for the highest-income workers. In 2011, the long-term projected HI trust fund deficit increased, in part because the recent recession depressed 2010 taxable earnings considerably more than previously expected.
Keeping Medicare Solvent After declining rapidly for nearly a decade, the Medicare trustees’ estimate of the solvency of Medicare’s hospital trust fund shot up after the passage of health reform. The dip in 2011 is related to lower than expected tax revenues caused by a weak economy. Source: Annual reports of the Boards of Trustees of the Federal Hospital Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Funds, 1970-2011.
How Did Health Reform Bring Down Medicare’s Costs? Not by cutting benefits or asking seniors to pay more
Health Reform Tames Cost Growth Health reform put the brakes on rapid medical inflation, bringing the projected growth of health care spending to its lowest rate in decades. Although the health reform law will slow both public and private spending, Medicare will remain more cost-effective than private insurance: a For common benefits. CMS, NEH Web Tables (Washington, DC: 2009), Table 13. b For total benefits. CMS, National Health Expenditure Projection, 2010-2020 (Washington, DC: 2011), Table 17. c Legislation enacted in 1997 included a number of provisions that slowed growth in payments to hospitals, physicians, and other providers and established new payment methodologies for skilled nursing facilities, home health agencies, and other service categories. d The Affordable Care Act reduced projected Medicare spending through payment and delivery system reforms and an increase in the payroll contribution from the highest-income earners.
Health Reform Rationalizes Payment Rates Graph taken from Patricia Davis et al., “Medicare Provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” Congressional Research Service. November 3, 2010 Under new rules established by health reform doctors will continue to get pay raises every year, but these raises will be about 1 percent lower than they would have been under prior law. This should save nearly $200 billion over ten years.
Health Reform Cuts Waste According to The Commonwealth Fund, privately managed Medicare Advantage plans cost the federal government 13 percent more than the same care delivered through traditional Medicare. Ending these overpayments and paying private plans at the same rates as traditional Medicare will save $136 billion over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Health Reform Fights Fraud and Abuse Health reform included a number of provisions that strengthen Medicare’s stamp out fraud and abuse, including: • Enhanced oversight protocols, especially in areas identified as presenting a high risk of fraud. • More funding for anti-fraud measures, such as databases to share information between various state and federal agencies. • Stiffer penalties for violators and high standards for various providers
Health reform is about smart reforms to strengthen Medicare. Health reform cuts excess payments to insurance companies. It cuts spending while improving benefits. Health reform lowers out-of-pocket costs for people with Medicare.
Health Reform Improves Benefits Health reform saves money for Medicare enrollees. The biggest change is reform of prescription drug coverage. Before health reform, individuals were responsible for the entire cost of drugs between their drug plans’ coverage limit and a catastrophic cap of $6,154. Health reform phases out this “donut hole” in the coming decade, saving thousands of dollars for enrollees.
Health Reform Protects Pocketbooks Older adults and people with disabilities who do not use a lot of drugs also benefit from lower out-of-pocket costs under the new health reform law. Changes to premiums and coinsurance payments will reduce spending for most enrollees. Source: Healthcare.gov. Estimates from a memo by John Shatto, Director of Medicare & Medicaid Cost Estimates Group, CMS Office of the Actuary, October 5, 2010.
Health Reform Covers Prevention Under health reform, people with Medicare can now receive preventive medicine without any copays. Services that are now free include: • An annual wellness visit and the creation of a personalized prevention plan. • Blood pressure measurements and detection of cognitive impairments • Discussion of risk factors for various conditions and a 5-year screening schedule.
It’s important to keep Medicare costs as low as possible for the country and to guarantee health and financial security for older adults and people with disabilities.Health reform, the Affordable Care Act, proved that we can lower costs without cutting benefits or asking people with Medicare to pay more.
Finishing the Job Health reform improved Medicare in a number of ways, but there is plenty more that can be done to reduce costs without cutting benefits, including: • Negotiating with pharmaceutical companies to get the best deals on brand-name drugs. • Reforming the inefficient administrative system for “dual-eligibles,” people with Medicare and Medicaid, that splits the responsibility for millions of patients’ care between states and the federal government. • Strengthening Medicare’s ability to control waste and fraud.