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Medicare Advantage Cure Is Worse Than The Disease

By Ken Terry | Sep 3, 2009

During the 2008 election campaign, then Sen. Obama and other Democratic Presidential candidates bemoaned the excessive amount that Medicare was paying private Medicare Advantage plans. And President Obama has made cutbacks in these payments part of his “reserve fund” for healthcare reform. But the way the government proposes to reduce payments to Medicare Advantage plans may be counterproductive, according to a new study from George Washington University.

The Office of Management and Budget has proposed a competitive bidding process in which the payments to MA plans would be based on the average of all bids submitted to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) in a particular area. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that this approach would result in CMS paying only 101 percent of the amount spent on beneficiaries in the fee-for-service program, which would lead to savings of $150 billion over 10 years.

The recent GWU study, however, found that while CMS would pay about the same to MA plans nationally as it does in conventional Medicare, the amounts it would pay in relation to the fee-for-service program would vary markedly from one region to another. In 11 states, including Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin, CMS payments to MA plans would exceed fee-for-service payments by an average of 10 percent, or about $1,000 per enrollee. In contrast, payments to plans in other areas would drop steeply. In Florida, for example, they would be 20 percent, or $2,100, less than fee-for-service reimbursement per enrollee.

In general, MA plans would continue to receive higher payments in rural areas and small cities, while plans in large urban areas like Los Angeles, Miami and New York would be paid less than the fee-for-service Medicare level.

If the OMB’s proposal is carried out, the authors say, MA plans would be unlikely to fold as many did in the late ’90s, when their annual rate increases were capped. Even in lower-payment areas, their internal costs and profits would be accounted for in their bids. But the extra benefits they provide to Medicare beneficiaries would probably be curtailed.

Market-based reimbursement is an effort to counter the irrational payment methodology based on historical Medicare costs in each county. But if it results in benefit cutbacks to Medicare patients, the cure may be worse than the disease. And, if seniors get no added benefits in return for their premiums and network restrictions, they might as well switch back to traditional Medicare.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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    CJB42

    09/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Medicare Advantage Cure Is Worse Than The Disease

    Medicare advantage has proven a very effective means of providing healthcare to seniors. A recent study shows?.across the board, Medicare Advantage plans outperformed Original Medicare by wide margins. Hospital Readmission Rates were 27% lower, Emergency Room Visits 86% lower, Preventable Inpatient Visits 87% lower. http://commonhealth.wbur.org/eric-schultz/2009/09/medicare-advantage-is-part-of-the-solution/
    Unfortunately what is happening in major markets is that Medicare Advantage Plan enrollees are finding their plans have been eliminated for 2010. Several major providers have bailed on the entire industry (Coventry, and others) and many are eliminating their low cost options. Those affected are those with limited incomes who will see much higher premiums in 2010.

    I agree that MA should be required to compete on price with traditional Medicare. However, Medicare has so many costs that are hidden (not intentionally) and absorbed by other U.S. entities. i.e. Premium billing, collection, and customer service handled by Social Security Admin. These are expensive necessities not reflected in Medicare?s true costs. There are others. MA should have a fair payment (108-110% seems about right) that reflect the true costs and providers can provide plans at whatever premium they want, in the counties they want, in exchange for the predetermined reimbursement - A simple, rational, non-political, free market solution.

  •  
    2

    EyeDrMike

    09/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Medicare Advantage Cure Is Worse Than The Disease

    Medicare (dis)Advantage plans may have additional costs, but they MORE than make up for that in the reduced and disallowed payments to doctors. In many cases their payments are only 40% of FFS Medicare while the insurance companies make billions in profits. Eliminate the MA plans completely and let me get back to patient care instead of fighting with the companies for payment. I recently wrote off thousands of dollars in charges that were disallowed incorrectly by the UHC MA plans, and we could not bill the patients because we did not warn them that their insurance plan may not pay.

    BTW, CJB42: referring to Medicare, private insurance, and "non-political free market" in the same sentence is a classic oxymoron. Medicare is completely political, and neither private insurance nor medicare is free market: they are exempt from anti-trust laws, but doctors cannot collectively bargain for fees. As a result, doctors take pay cuts every year while our costs skyrocket. the average primary care physician in the US makes less than the average auto worker while having a great deal more responsibility and personal exposure to liability.

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