
Report: Bill would reduce senior care
Medicare cuts approved by House may affect access to providers
By Lori Montgomery
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 15, 2009
A plan to slash more than $500 billion from future Medicare spending -- one of
the biggest sources of funding for President Obama's proposed overhaul of the
nation's health-care system -- would sharply reduce benefits for some senior
citizens and could jeopardize access to care for millions of others, according
to a government evaluation released Saturday.
The report, requested by House Republicans, found that Medicare cuts contained
in the health package approved by the House on Nov. 7 are likely to prove so
costly to hospitals and nursing homes that they could stop taking Medicare
altogether.
Congress could intervene to avoid such an outcome, but "so doing would likely
result in significantly smaller actual savings" than is currently projected,
according to the analysis by the chief actuary for the agency that administers
Medicare and Medicaid. That would wipe out a big chunk of the financing for the
health-care reform package, which is projected to cost $1.05 trillion over the
next decade.
More generally, the report questions whether the country's network of doctors
and hospitals would be able to cope with the effects of a reform package
expected to add more than 30 million people to the ranks of the insured, many of
them through Medicaid, the public health program for the poor.
In the face of greatly increased demand for services, providers are likely to
charge higher fees or take patients with better-paying private insurance over
Medicaid recipients, "exacerbating existing access problems" in that program,
according to the report from Richard S. Foster of the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services.
Though the report does not attempt to quantify that impact, Foster writes: "It
is reasonable to expect that a significant portion of the increased demand for
Medicaid would not be realized."
The report offers the clearest and most authoritative assessment to date of the
effect that Democratic health reform proposals would have on Medicare and
Medicaid, the nation's largest public health programs. It analyzes the House
bill, but the Senate is also expected to rely on hundreds of billions of dollars
in Medicare cuts to finance the package that Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.)
hopes to take to the floor this week. Like the House, the Senate is expected to
propose adding millions of people to Medicaid.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administers the two health-care
programs. Foster's office acts as an independent technical adviser, serving both
the administration and Congress. In that sense, it is similar to the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office, which also has questioned the sustainability of
proposed Medicare cuts.
In its most recent analysis of the House bill, the CBO noted that Medicare
spending per beneficiary would have to grow at roughly half the rate it has over
the past two decades to meet the measure's savings targets, a dramatic reduction
that many budget and health policy experts consider unrealistic.
"This report confirms what virtually every independent expert has been saying:
[House] Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi's health-care bill will increase costs, not
decrease them," said Rep. Dave Camp (Mich.), the senior Republican on the House
Ways and Means Committee. "This is a stark warning to every Republican, Democrat
and independent worried about the financial future of this nation."
Democrats focused Saturday on the positive aspects of the report, noting that
Foster concludes that overall national spending on health care would increase by
a little more than 1 percent over the next decade, even though millions of
additional people would gain insurance. Out-of-pocket spending would decline
more than $200 billion by 2019, with the government picking up much of that. The
Medicare savings, if they materialized, would extend the life of that program by
five years, meaning it would not begin to require cash infusions until 2022.
"The president has made it clear that health insurance reform will protect and
strengthen Medicare," said White House spokeswoman Linda Douglass. "And he has
also made clear that no guaranteed Medicare benefits will be cut."
Republicans argued that the report forecasts an increase in total health-care
spending of more than $289 billion.
No need for the mandatory euthanasia counseling for the elderly if they can't find a doctor, or if the only primary care physician they can find got his M.D. from the University of Rawalpindi and can't speak english very good. We are SO screwed.