A long read but worth it and it exposed Mayor Pete's medicare for all that want it and other Dems pushing the so-called "public option."Your text online says: "This NYT article on the faults in current medicare for those who choose medicare advantage and other plans points out that once in you can't get out."There's a difference between Medicare Advantage Plans and Medigaps (=supplementary plans). Your statement is wrong to group them because these two things have different rules.Here's what the Times article actually said:"During the six months after you sign up for Part B (outpatient services), Medigap plans cannot reject you, or charge a higher premium, because of pre-existing conditions. After that time, you can be rejected or charged more, unless you live in one of four states (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine and New York) that provide some level of guarantee to enroll at a later time with pre-existing condition protection."When I read the Times article, I had mistakenly and stupidly transferred your "medicare advantage" wording into the NY Times text. They were ONLY talking abut MEDIGAPS, which are definitely restrictive in other states, and don't allow you back in, etc., etc.Your sentence has to be fixed to reflect what the Times article says: Medigaps. The Advantage plans do not throw you out.My colleague dealt directly with the MEDIGAPS reference:" Medigaps are state regulated. Each state is different. That is what they are saying. And I got confirmation about the pre-existing in NYS, it is only if you did not enroll in Medicare when first eligible and had no coverage (employee, retiree, etc.) for 8 mo. If clients are thinking of moving out of state, they should be referred to that state's SHIP, phone # available on medicare.gov.If I had read the TImes wording better first time round, I would have told you pretty much the same thing.Definitely recommend fixing that wording in Ednotes. It's misleading.
Every day the media reports on health care mayhem but doesn't connect to the solution of medicare for all. This NYT article on the faults in current medicare for those who choose medicare advantage and other plans points out that once in you can't get out. I was tempted initially but luckily Carol worked in the field dealing with all the plans and learned that the more the government ran it the better it was for everyone - so even in medicare, people have been pushed into semi-private aspects - due I'm sure to the lobbying of private insurers who wanted to get their cut. Check to see which dem candidates they are contributing to and how much they attack Bernie's plan.
This is where the public option as opposed to medicare for all leads us. So when Dem cand sell the public option - beware.
Don't believe the advertising - Medicare’s Private Option Is Gaining Popularity, and Critics As more Americans sign up for Medicare Advantage, detractors worry that it’s helping private insurers more than patients.
Medicare’s Private Option Is Gaining Popularity, and Critics
When Ed Stein signed up for Medicare eight years ago, the insurance choice seemed like a no-brainer.
Mr.
Stein, a Denver retiree, could choose original, fee-for-service
Medicare or its private managed-care alternative, Medicare Advantage. He
was a healthy and active 65-year-old, and he picked Advantage for its
extra benefits.
“The price was the
same, I liked the access to gyms, and the drug plan was very good,” he
recalled. After a pause, he added: “Never in my wildest dreams did I
think I’d be facing a crisis like the one I’m having now.”
In
November, at age 72, Mr. Stein received a diagnosis of aggressive
bladder cancer that would require chemotherapy and a complex surgical
procedure. The doctor who he determined was the best local specialist
for his condition was not in his network, so Mr. Stein decided to switch
to original Medicare for 2020 — a move that would allow him to see
nearly any health care provider he chose.
That
was when he ran up against one of the least understood implications of
selecting Advantage when you enroll in Medicare: The decision is
effectively irrevocable.
Most
enrollees in traditional Medicare buy supplemental coverage to protect
them from potentially high out-of-pocket costs. In 2016, out-of-pocket
spending in the program averaged $3,166, excluding premiums, according
to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Supplemental
coverage sometimes comes from a former employer, a union or Medicaid,
although many people buy a commercial Medigap plan. But the best, and
sometimes only, time to buy a Medigap policy is when you first join
Medicare.
During the six months after
you sign up for Part B (outpatient services), Medigap plans cannot
reject you, or charge a higher premium, because of pre-existing
conditions. After that time, you can be rejected or charged more, unless
you live in one of four states
(Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine and New York) that provide some
level of guarantee to enroll at a later time with pre-existing condition
protection.
Mr.
Stein’s cancer diagnosis made the switch to original Medicare virtually
impossible. “We were just shocked to learn that,” he recalled.
His coverage problems led to a frenzied scramble in November that
ultimately involved treatment at four hospitals — and a last-minute
switch to a different Advantage network that includes his preferred
physician.
The
problems have taken their toll. “When you’re in the middle of a health
crisis, the last thing you need is to be negotiating with health
providers and insurance,” said Mr. Stein’s wife, Lisa Hartman. “We spent
as many hours talking with all these people about squaring away our
insurance as we did actually getting treatment.”
Medicare
Advantage is growing quickly — enrollment is expected to jump to 47
percent of all Medicare beneficiaries in 2029 from 34 percent this year,
according to a Kaiser analysis of Congressional Budget Office projections.
Some
of the growth stems from heavy investment by health insurance companies
in geographic expansion and marketing. The industry points to high rates of consumer satisfaction with Advantage, noting extra services offered by many plans, such as health clubs, dental, vision and hearing care.
“Advantage
plans are partnering with hospitals, doctors and other care providers
to improve outcomes for patients, deliver care more efficiently and add
more value compared with the fee-for-service model,” says Greg Berger,
vice president of Medicare policy at America’s Health Insurance Plans,
the national association of health insurance companies.
The
rise of Advantage has also been aided by changes in federal law and
regulation in recent years. And under the Trump administration, critics
say, Medicare’s administrators have been tipping the scales improperly
in favor of Advantage.
The
growth has occurred without much public policy debate about the effects
of large-scale privatization on patient health, and on the costs to
both the government and enrollees. As “Medicare for all” is debated in
the 2020 presidential race, most voters perceive that these proposals
are calling for a government alternative to commercial health insurance —
yet the current Medicare program is shifting toward greater
privatization, not less.
“When we talk
about Medicare for all or public options,” said Tricia Neuman, director
of the Medicare policy program at the Kaiser Family Foundation, “people
may not realize that we already have a Medicare program that is coming
to be dominated by some very large private insurance companies.”
More benefits, more flexibility
Legislation
and regulatory changes in recent years have favored Advantage by
permitting new supplemental benefits and more favorable enrollment
rules.
Since the Affordable Care Act
was passed in 2010, the government’s per-patient reimbursement rates for
Advantage plans have been roughly equal to those in the original
program. But Advantage plans can qualify for bonus payments under a
quality rating system that many experts say uses flawed methods. MedPAC,
an independent agency that advises Congress on Medicare, has
recommended replacing the system.
Moreover,
an investigation by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office
of Inspector General found that Advantage plans were receiving extra
payments from Medicare by adding medical conditions
such as diabetes and cancer to patient records that may not have been
justified. An estimated $2.7 billion in additional payments in 2017 were
not linked to a specific service or a face-to-face visit with a
patient, the report found.
The report
did not conclude specifically that insurers were fraudulently
overbilling Medicare, and the problem may be linked to record keeping.
Advantage plans have had more flexible enrollment rules than original Medicare since 2019. People who sign up for Advantage during regular fall enrollment
can also take advantage of an additional enrollment period, during the
first three months of each year, when they can switch or drop out of
Advantage plans.
“It gives people in
Advantage plans more flexibility to make changes in their coverage,”
said David Lipschutz, an associate director at the Center for Medicare
Advocacy. “People enrolled in traditional Medicare with a stand-alone
prescription drug plan don’t have that flexibility.”
The
government has taken other steps that favor Advantage. Since 2011, all
plans have been required to cap out-of-pocket expenses at $6,700, but
most H.M.O. or P.P.O. plans have a somewhat lower ceiling — last year,
it was $5,059 for in-network services, according to Kaiser.
Yet there is no built-in cap on out-of-pocket costs in original
Medicare; the only way to get that is to obtain supplemental coverage.
Another example of what critics see as an uneven playing field for Advantage plans are the extra, albeit limited, benefits.
“We
want to see equity and parity between original Medicare and Medicare
Advantage plans,” said Frederic Riccardi, president of the Medicare
Rights Center, a nonprofit advocacy group that provides counseling to
Medicare enrollees.
Does Advantage have a leg up?
Under
President Trump, some critics contend, the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, which administers Medicare, has become a cheerleader
for Advantage plans at the expense of original Medicare.
Advocates
and some lawmakers have complained about bias in educational and
outreach materials on enrollment, and in public statements about
Advantage by the agency’s administrator, Seema Verma.
One
flare-up was provoked by a draft release of the 2019 Medicare & You
handbook, an important annual guide mailed to all enrollees and made available online.
Advocates and some lawmakers criticized language describing Advantage
as a less expensive alternative to original Medicare. But despite the
data on patients’ average spending, no figures are available on their
specific out-of-pocket costs.
“We know
absolutely nothing about what people actually pay for services,” Dr.
Neuman of Kaiser said. “If someone is really sick and uses a lot of
covered services, they could pay less with traditional Medicare coupled
with a Medigap policy than they would in a Medicare Advantage plan, even
after taking into account Medigap premiums.”
The
handbook’s language was revised before its final release, but
communications from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
during last fall’s Medicare enrollment period do appear to promote
Advantage plans.
An email to
enrollees, for example, urged them to investigate “more details on
Medicare Advantage plans so you can quickly compare covered benefits,”
with no mention of original Medicare. And a video
promoted “new extra benefits,” a reference to a new range of nonmedical
supplemental benefits that are just starting to roll out in the
Advantage program and are not yet widely available.
“There
does seem to be a strong philosophical preference for private insurance
over public programs in this administration,” Dr. Neuman said.
If
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is tipping the scales,
it would be a violation of federal law, Mr. Lipschutz argued.
“C.M.S.
is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which is
required under the statutes governing Medicare to ‘promote an active,
informed selection’ among Medicare’s plan coverage options,” he said. “A
great deal of their communication material doesn’t meet that standard.”
The
agency declined a request for an interview. But a spokesman replied
that its enrollment communication efforts included a “robust and
multifaceted outreach campaign that encourages consumers to review their
Medicare coverage, compare alternatives and make an informed decision
about options for the incoming year.”
How is Americans’ health affected?
Which type of coverage produces better health outcomes? The evidence is mixed.
“We’ve
seen a number of studies that look at the available measures and try to
give some indication of how Advantage is performing compared with
traditional Medicare,” Dr. Neuman said. “It does better on some
indicators, and on some others, traditional Medicare does better.”
Defenders
of Advantage programs point to studies that conclude they are
outperforming original Medicare in areas like preventive care, hospital
readmission rates, admissions to nursing homes and mortality rates. And
they note that the managed care approach is a key part of the program’s
success.
But critics point to high levels of denial of care. Federal investigators reported in 2018
that Advantage plans had a pattern of inappropriately denying patient
claims. The Office of Inspector General at the Department of Health and
Human Services found “widespread and persistent problems related to
denials of care and payment in Medicare Advantage” plans.
Serious
illness is a common motive for leaving an Advantage plan, according to
many Medicare advocates and counseling services. After his diagnosis,
Mr. Stein, a retired editorial cartoonist for the now-defunct Rocky
Mountain News, contacted his Advantage plan to confirm that all of the
doctors he wanted to see were in his network — and was told that they
were. But after surgery and the ensuing hospital stay, he found himself
enmeshed in a series of conflicting messages about whether the treatment
was covered.
Confusion about network providers is widespread. In a review of provider directories
completed in 2018, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services found
that 49 percent contained at least one inaccuracy. Errors included
incorrect locations and phone numbers, and whether a provider was
accepting new patients.
Mr. Stein’s
coverage is still in dispute, and there is no guarantee that his new
plan will include his oncologist indefinitely. Advantage plans can drop
providers at any time, and they do.
“We
think of ourselves as sophisticated consumers, but when it comes to
health care, it is almost impossible to figure it out,” Mr. Stein said.
A version of this article appears in print on , Section BU, Page 8 of the New York edition with the headline: A Medicare Plan Favors Private Insurers, Critics Say. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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