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Bush
Budget and seniors
Feb.
3, 2003 - President Bush released his budget for 2004 today and
Medicare and Social Security both made it into the first paragraph
of his statement on the 2.2 trillion dollar budget. The White House also provided more details on their plan to modernize Medicare.
In
his opening paragraph he said, “The budget for 2004 meets the challenges posed by three national priorities: winning the war against
terrorism, securing the homeland, and generating long-term economic growth. It
restrains the growth in federal spending and addresses the long-term
fiscal challenge presented by Medicare and Social
Securitys unfunded promises. This year's budget also helps America
meet its goals both at home and overseas.”
(To read the entire statement – Click
Here)
Medicare
Strengthening and Improving Medicare. One of the
President’s top priorities is to address the problems confronting the Medicare program and make Medicare
secure for future generations. In July 2001, the President
announced a framework to strengthen Medicare. The President believes any
Medicare modernization package should follow these principles.
Principles
for Strengthening and Improving Medicare
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All
seniors should have the option of a subsidized prescription drug
benefit as part | of modernized Medicare.
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Modernized
Medicare should provide better coverage for preventive care
and serious illnesses.
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Today’s
beneficiaries and those approaching retirement should have the
option of keeping the traditional plan with no changes.
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Medicare
should make available better health insurance options, like those
available to all federal employees.
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Medicare
legislation should strengthen the program’s long-term financial
security.
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The
management of the government Medicare plan should be strengthened to
improve care for seniors.
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Medicare’s
regulations and administrative procedures should be updated and
streamlined, while instances of fraud and abuse should be reduced.
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Medicare
should encourage high-quality health care for all seniors.
Medicare
will spend over $250 billion in 2004 on health care for approximately 41
million senior and disabled citizens. However, the number of
elderly and disabled who have insurance coverage through Medicare is
not a sufficient measure of the success of the program. In the last
40 years, health care services and delivery have advanced in the private
marketplace while the Medicare program
has remained in the 1960’s.
With
its cumbersome structure, the Medicare program is unable to adapt to the
changing health care marketplace, let alone be an innovative leader.
Medicare’s out of date benefit does not provide a prescription
drug benefit or catastrophic coverage. Medicare’s private plan
options are shrinking under the weight of insufficient payments and
stultifying regulations. Worse yet, Medicare is not
financially secure for the retirement of the Baby Boom generation.
As discussed in “The Real Fiscal Danger” chapter of this volume,
Medicare has enormous liabilities that put beneficiaries at risk.
The actuaries estimate that when we look at the full view of Medicare from
a budget perspective, the net liability is $13.3 trillion in net present
value terms. This reflects the difference between Medicare payments
to the public and Medicare receipts from the public.
Major
Deficiencies in Medicare
Prescription Drugs. Prescription drugs are an increasingly
important part of modern medicine, helping to relieve pain, cure disease,
and enhance the lives of millions of Americans. Medicare does not
cover most outpatient prescription drugs, even though these drugs often
replace more expensive hospital care. According to a recent Health
Affairs study, 22 percent of all seniors surveyed reported going
without one or more doses of medication due to costs, with this share
rising to 35 percent among those seniors without any drug coverage at all.
Preventive Care. Medicare’s coverage of treatments proven
to prevent illnesses and save lives is insufficient. For those
preventive services Medicare does cover, beneficiaries may face costs
in the hundreds of dollars each year in copayments.
Health Plan Options. Medicare+Choice, the program designed to
give seniors plan options, including prescription drug coverage, is
shrinking due to insufficient payments that bear little relation to
increasing health care costs. Where they are available, private plan
options give seniors more power. If they are not
happy with the service they are receiving, they can simply switch to a
different plan. The decline of Medicare+Choice has left
beneficiaries with few, if any, health plan options other than the
government-managed fee-for-service program.
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Cost-Sharing and Catastrophic Coverage. Medicare fails
to protect beneficiaries against major out-of-pocket expenditures, hitting
the sickest, poorest beneficiaries the hardest. Thus, most
beneficiaries must obtain supplemental coverage to fill in Medicare’s
gaps. Much of the existing supplemental coverage, however, is
antiquated and poorly tailored to meet today’s health care needs.
For example, Medigap—which covers about one-quarter of Medicare
beneficiaries—covers a far higher share of the up-front deductibles and
cost-sharing than many other private plans, yet few Medigap plans offer
prescription drug coverage and even that coverage is thin. According
to the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), Medicare expenditures for
beneficiaries with Medigap insurance were about $2,000 higher than for
beneficiaries with Medicare only.
Major Elements of Medicare Modernization. The President’s
Budget builds upon the President’s framework. The budget dedicates
$400 billion over 10 years for Medicare modernization including protection
against catastrophic costs, better private options for all beneficiaries,
and prescription drug coverage.
Providing Access to Prescription Drug Coverage. The drug
benefit would protect beneficiaries against high drug expenses and
low-income beneficiaries would receive additional assistance.
Beneficiaries would have a choice of plans that offer benefits by using
some or all of the tools widely available in private drug plans to lower
drug costs and improve quality of care. This benefit would support the
continuation of the prescription drug coverage that many beneficiaries
already receive through employer-sponsored plans and private health
insurance plans.
More Choice Through Health Plan Competition. In the
short-term, Medicare+Choice’s administrative pricing system must be
reformed to link plan payments to the rising costs of health care services
provided by the plans, particularly prescription drugs. Medicare’s
coverage will be improved to give beneficiaries the same kind of reliable
health care options that all federal employees and many other Americans
enjoy. The foundation must be a market-based system in which private
plans can bid to provide coverage for beneficiaries at a competitive
price. Those beneficiaries who elect a less costly option should be
able to keep most of the savings—so in some cases a beneficiary may pay
no premium at all.
Modernized Fee for Service. Medicare’s benefit package
needs to be updated to reflect better the modern-day insurance offered in
the private sector. A rationalized system of cost-sharing would end
the program’s current system of penalizing patients who need acute care.
An improved system should also provide catastrophic coverage, ensuring
that beneficiaries are protected against high out-of-pocket costs caused
by serious illnesses.
A Truthful View of Medicare’s Fiscal Status. Given the
financial challenges faced by Medicare in the future, the Congress must be
extremely careful that legislative changes not add to the long-term
unfunded promises faced by the program, which stand at a staggering $13.3
trillion.
Versions
of Medicare legislation considered in the 107th Congress would
have made progress in expanding beneficiary access to prescription drug
coverage, but no bill met the President’s principles for strengthening
and improving Medicare or did enough to modernize the program for the 21st
Century.
Provider Payment Issues. In 2002, Medicare payments to
physicians decreased over five percent as a result of a statutorily
defined payment formula. The formula would require additional
decreases in payments for the next several years. The budget
proposes to adjust the physician payment formula for actual data in the
current and previous update systems. These adjustments would
substantially improve physician payment rates. The Administration will
work with the Congress to monitor payment issues for other providers.
Credible sources such as the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC)
and the GAO have found that many providers are being paid in excess of
adequate returns. The Administration will consider how savings from
provider payment adjustments could be used to help support a comprehensive
Medicare modernization package.
Additional
Medicare Improvements
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The
Administration will pursue legislation to ensure Medicare more
accurately reimburses for covered outpatient drugs, and the cost of
administering them.
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Medicare
and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program jointly finance
health insurance for about 2.1 million federal retirees and their
dependents. The Administration will work with stakeholders to
better coordinate these two programs and look to the practices of the
private sector to ensure high quality, cost-conscious choices for
retirees.
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There
is limited information available on the quality of care provided to
Medicare beneficiaries nationwide, and many providers struggle to find
resources for quality improvement. Today, groundbreaking efforts
are underway in the Medicare program to provide public information on
the quality of care delivered in hospitals and nursing homes.
This information will help consumers make more informed health care
choices and enable providers to improve their quality of care.
These efforts are part of a larger goal of quality improvement
throughout the health care sector.
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Program Management.
Medicare Appeals Reform. The budget includes $129 million for
the processing of Medicare appeals. The adjudicative function
currently performed by Administrative Law Judges at the Social Security
Administration would be transferred to CMS. In addition, the
Administration proposes several legislative changes to the Medicare
appeals process that would give CMS flexibility to reform the appeals
system. These changes will enable CMS to respond to beneficiary and
provider appeals in an efficient and effective manner.
Healthy Start, Grow Smart. Infants and toddlers need parents
and caregivers who understand the importance of these early years.
To help in this goal, the Administration is proposing a new series of
booklets called Healthy Start, Grow Smart. This monthly guide
will be published in both English and Spanish and will be available to
parents every month during their baby’s first year of life. These
booklets provide valuable and age-appropriate information about health,
safety, nutritional needs, and early cognitive development that has been
proven to help babies thrive. Through the states, HHS will make
these pamphlets available to parents with newborns who are receiving
Medicaid services.
For
more details on the President's Budget - Click
Here |