1 / 19

Nothing For Something: Paying Twice for Drug Benefits in Medicare HMOs

Nothing For Something: Paying Twice for Drug Benefits in Medicare HMOs. Steven D. Pizer, Austin B. Frakt, and Roger Feldman* June 4, 2007. *University of Minnesota. Overview. MMA expanded benefits 2 ways: Created PDPs Hiked payments to HMOs.

jerome
Download Presentation

Nothing For Something: Paying Twice for Drug Benefits in Medicare HMOs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nothing For Something:Paying Twice for Drug Benefits in Medicare HMOs Steven D. Pizer, Austin B. Frakt, and Roger Feldman* June 4, 2007 www.hcfe.org *University of Minnesota

  2. Overview • MMA expanded benefits 2 ways: • Created PDPs • Hiked payments to HMOs. • Which produced better value per dollar of spending? • Result: Spending on HMOs creates much less value for beneficiaries than spending on PDPs. www.hcfe.org

  3. Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 • To encourage entry, MMA increased HMO payments for non-Rx benefits in ‘04, ‘05, and ‘06. • ‘05 to ‘06 payment rate increase was $31 PMPM (5%). • MMA also provided payment of at least 75% of cost of Rx benefit (worth about $90 PMPM). • Total payment increase: $30 + $90 = $120. www.hcfe.org

  4. HMO Entry, 2006 • 81% of HMO entry following MMA occurred in counties that already had HMOs. • 82% of enrollees were in an HMO with Rx benefits in 2004. • The $120 payment increase induced 5.5 plans/county to enter counties that already had HMOs and paid for Rx benefits already widely available. • This is the main effect of MMA payment changes on HMO entry. www.hcfe.org

  5. Cost/Benefit Methods Cost: • Estimate payment change needed to induce one more HMO. • Use average payment for one PDP vs. none. Benefit: • Calculate HMO benefit and premium changes resulting from payment & entry. • Estimate demand model. • Use estimated model with modified data to calculate value of each expansion to beneficiaries. www.hcfe.org

  6. Estimating Cost of HMO Entry • 81% of HMO entry following MMA was in counties that already had HMOs. • To roughly match MMA and keep costs down, we focus on entry in counties with HMOs in 2001. • Marginal analysis: To evaluate this expansion path, we estimate the cost of inducing one new entrant (not 5, like under MMA). www.hcfe.org

  7. Counties w/Medicare HMOs, 2001 www.hcfe.org

  8. Estimating Cost of HMO Entry (2) • We follow Cauley, Chernew, and McLaughlin (2005). • Number of HMOs offering Rx = f(payment rate, cost factors, county characteristics). • Model estimated by “ordered probit”. • Calculate increase in payment rate necessary to move predicted number up by one ($93.98). • Change in Cost = Dpayment rate x enrolleest-1 + (rate – average cost) x Denrollees = $170M/mo. www.hcfe.org

  9. Calculating Cost of PDP Entry • Simulate entry of one PDP in each county with statutory minimum benefits. • Average PDP premium for simulation was $30 (from 2006 data on low-benefit PDPs). • PDP premiums are 75% subsidized, so cost to Medicare is $90 per enrollee. • Total cost = $90 x simulated enrollment = $350M/mo. www.hcfe.org

  10. Consumer Surplus: Amount above actual premium that beneficiaries would have been willing to spend. P P* S D Q How To Measure Benefit? www.hcfe.org

  11. Estimation Method: Demand • Standard approach is conditional logit. • Nested logit adds flexibility and passes statistical tests. • Follow methods in Pizer, Frakt, & Feldman (2007). • Nested logit demand function predicts probability of plan choice as function of premium (among other things). • Can integrate with respect to premium to get consumer surplus (Small and Rosen, 1981). www.hcfe.org

  12. Effects of Payment on HMO Benefits and Premiums • BIPA became law in December 2000. • Changed HMO payment rates after premiums and benefits had been set for 2001. This is a natural experiment. • Pizer and Frakt (HCFR, 2002) estimated effects on HMO benefits and premiums holding expected costs constant. • Also estimated effects of competition. www.hcfe.org

  13. Simulation Method: Adding PDP • Estimate choice model. • Simplify choices: “representative” PDP. • Modify data to eliminate Medigap w/drugs & add PDP. • Apply estimated coefficients to modified data and calculate results. www.hcfe.org

  14. Simulation Results: Market Shares www.hcfe.org

  15. Simulation Results: Benefits and Costs www.hcfe.org

  16. Cost/Dollar of Added Consumer Surplus www.hcfe.org

  17. Conclusions • HMO expansion was 2.4 times more expensive than PDP expansion. • HMO expansion improved benefits, premiums, competition, and consumer surplus, but at very high cost to the government. • The MMA expansions were larger than those simulated here, but conclusions ought to apply. www.hcfe.org

  18. Policy Implications • HMOs already offered Rx coverage, so MMA faced a crowd-out problem like in Medicaid and employer-based plans. • “Clawback” provision recaptures savings from Medicaid & 28% employer subsidy splits savings with employers. • What can be done? Make bidding real: Connect benchmark to bids. www.hcfe.org

  19. Nothing For Something:Paying Twice for Drug Benefits in Medicare HMOs Steven D. Pizer, Austin B. Frakt, and Roger Feldman* June 4, 2007 www.hcfe.org *University of Minnesota

More Related