Let everyone get Medicare
Open up Medicare to all
My parents can get Medicare, so why not me? Americans should not have
to turn 65 years old or become disabled to have access to a public
healthcare program that controls overhead costs, provides broad,
affordable access to care and protects patients against big bills.
President Obama should open Medicare to all Americans who lose their
jobs, cannot afford private health insurance or simply prefer it to
private insurance or an HMO.
Part
of the promise of Obama-care is that patients would be able to join a
"public" healthcare plan, with or without subsidy, if they don't have a
private policy. Descriptions have been vague. Obama sometimes mentioned
the federal employee health benefits plan, which is merely a collection
of private insurance policies. At other times, he discussed "the public
option" as though it would be a stand-alone plan like Medicare, which
directly pays doctors and hospitals.
By almost every
measure, Medicare is cheaper and more effective than private plans,
according to government and academic research. Medicare spends 2% on
overhead; private insurers typically spend 25% to 27% for overhead and
profit.
A recent Congressional Budget Office report comparing
healthcare reform options found that allowing Americans to buy into
Medicare before turning 65 would lead to more people with coverage at
lower costs. The CBO estimated that a Medicare buy-in for those between
62 and 64 years old would cost $7,600 a year, including drug coverage.
A comparable policy on the private market at that age costs $10,000 and
up -- way up -- in combined premiums and deductibles, and is, unlike
Medicare, available only to the healthiest seniors.
A UC
Berkeley study last month found that a public option like Medicare
could result in $1 trillion in national savings over 10 years by
driving down costs, improving efficiencies and fostering innovation.
Critics
contend that Medicare pays doctors so little that most physicians won't
accept the coverage, and that it is too bureaucratic and financially
unstable. Medicare does use its size to drive down what doctors and
hospitals are paid. However, the Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission reports that 97% of physicians accept new Medicare patients,
with 80% taking all or most patients, which is comparable to HMO
acceptance rates. And with the massive consolidation of insurance
companies and of HMOs, doctors and hospitals report to our group that
Medicare payments are often as generous, if not more generous, than
those of HMOs and private plans -- and received with less hassle and
more consistency. Studies by AARP and the Commonwealth Fund also show
that Medicare patients are more satisfied with every aspect of their
care than patients with private plans.
Medicare's
financial challenges are also real but solvable. Predictions of its
impending bankruptcy mostly have to do with the fact that the program
serves the sickest and neediest patients in the system without a proper
revenue base and in an era of costly techno-medicine. There are a
number of ways to help solve the funding problem.
First,
Obama's promise of new technology for better medical record keeping
should limit unnecessary or duplicative procedures. Obama also must
grapple with Medicare's unintended incentives to doctors to do too many
costly procedures at the end of life that only prolong life but do not
improve quality of life. Tom Daschle, the new secretary of Health and
Human Services, has already made this a priority by calling for doctors
and hospitals to be paid for performance rather than by the number of
procedures they perform or drugs they prescribe.
Bringing
younger and healthier patients into the Medicare risk pool also would
stabilize the program's funding. They don't use as much medical care as
older and sicker patients, so their payments would offset the cost of
care for the sicker ones. Allowing employers to offer Medicare is one
way to widen the risk pool. Payroll deductions for Medicare would be
less than what the average employer and employee now pay, according to
congressional research.
Finally, the president's pledge to
give the Medicare program the authority to buy prescription drugs in
bulk for the program's 44 million recipients would be another
cost-saver. This should drive down prices for recipients by about 60%.
With
Medicare as the public option in his healthcare plan, the president
could increase its buying power to further reduce expenditures.
Obama-care should make Medicare as big as Americans want it to be.
Jamie Court is president of Consumer Watchdog, which has offices in Santa Monica and Washington.















