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July
30th marks the 45th anniversary of Medicare. When
President Johnson signed the Medicare program into law in 1965, he
ushered in an era of better health and financial security for older
Americans and their families. Medicare did what private insurance
failed to do – provide health coverage for people age 65 and older.
Over the years Medicare was expanded to cover other people not
popular with private insurance: people with disabilities, End Stage
Renal Disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (also known as Lou
Gehrig's Disease). Today, 47 million older and disabled people
receive health insurance and access to health care through Medicare.
In
2010, when President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
into law (also known as the health care reform law), he helped
ensure a brighter financial future for Medicare, better coverage for
beneficiaries, and reduced costs for beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Health care reform will extend the solvency of the Medicare Trust
Fund by about twelve years, add preventive benefits without
cost-sharing for beneficiaries, and improve the Part D prescription
drug program. It will likely result in reduced Part B premiums for
most beneficiaries. Health care reform will also slow the
privatization of Medicare that, for the past decade, has added costs
with no corresponding benefit. In 2010, therefore, it's particularly
appropriate to remember and celebrate the effect that Medicare has
had on this country, and its importance to the daily lives of
millions of Americans.
We
forget what it was like before Medicare (and Social Security and
Medicaid). Before Medicare, half of all older people had no
insurance. Private insurance companies did not want to cover this
population because of their age and chronic conditions. When health
insurance was available, many older people could not afford
it. In 1965, 25% of Medicare beneficiaries lived in poverty.
Medicare has enhanced the health and financial security of older
people and their families; they no longer have to worry about paying
for catastrophic medical costs. Because of Medicare, virtually all
Americans age 65 or older are insured.
Medicare has had a remarkably broad-based, positive impact on the
country's well-being in so many ways. Did you know, for example,
that by refusing to pay for care at segregated facilities, Medicare
helped desegregate hospitals and other health care institutions?
Today,
traditional Medicare continues to be one of the most flexible health
insurance programs available. The program covers care provided by a
broad array of doctors, hospitals, home health agencies and other
health care providers. The 75% of Medicare beneficiaries who are
currently in the traditional Medicare program can choose virtually
any doctor, hospital, or other provider that accepts Medicare,
anywhere in the country.
Further, unlike people who receive health insurance through private
insurance coverage, Medicare beneficiaries don't have to worry about
having their health insurance rescinded if they become sick or file
"too many" claims. Nor will Medicare exclude coverage based on a
pre-existing condition or impose an annual or life-time cap on
benefits.
It's no
wonder that Medicare is very popular with the people it serves. In
fact, Medicare beneficiaries rate their satisfaction with Medicare
much higher than workers with employer-sponsored insurance rate
their health care coverage, citing access to providers in
particular.[1]
Despite
Medicare's success, however, it faces serious challenges and
threats, some real, some imagined, some imposed. The increased role
of Medicare private plans during the last decade took a toll on
Medicare's well-being. Private plans were paid approximately 14%
more on average than traditional Medicare would have been paid to
cover the same services. Fortunately, these overpayments will be
gradually turned back, pursuant to the health care reform law,
adding about twelve years to the solvency of the Medicare Trust
Fund.
Some
policy-makers, however, including the bipartisan National Commission
on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, are focused on reducing the
federal deficit by limiting programs such as Medicare. Others
continue to call for turning Medicare into a voucher program, or
increasing the age of eligibility, or continuing to income-base
cost-sharing and benefits. These approaches threaten the promise of
Medicare as a program providing stable, uniform coverage to all its
beneficiaries.
Indeed,
Medicare's future as a public social insurance program with a
uniform benefit and cost-sharing system has been whittled away
during the last ten years. Medicare private plans (known as
Medicare Advantage plans) were given increased funding and more
flexibility during the Bush Administration, in 2003 the Part D
prescription drug benefit was initiated only through private
plans, and Part B and D cost-sharing mechanisms are increasingly
based on the individual's income. All this has eroded the single
community of interest among all beneficiaries, rich, poor, healthy,
or infirm, that has kept Medicare strong.
So,
while celebrating Medicare, we also urge vigilance lest we
inadvertently return to the circumstances before Medicare – when so
many older and disabled people could not obtain health insurance.
Our goal is to keep Medicare's promise to provide fair access to
health care through a stable, unified program. In this way we can
help ensure that Medicare's 45th anniversary will mark its grand
maturity, not its mid-life crisis.
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