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The Conservative Principles Inherent in the Medicare Reform Legislation
Various sources, including Sen. Bill Frist's site, Sen. Rep. Policy Comm., and the White House ^ | 2/6/04 | My2Cents, and various sources

Posted on 02/06/2004 10:08:46 AM PST by My2Cents

The Conservative Principles Inherent in the Medicare Reform Legislation

(This article was written from information gleaned from a variety of sources, including the White House, the Senate GOP Policy Committee, the Sen. Majority Leader's website, the Amer. Assoc. of Health Plans., and from the author's experience in the health care industry.)

There has been much murmuring among conservatives over President Bush’s domestic policies, stemming mainly from spending initiatives. “Spending like a drunken sailor” is pretty much the way it’s been characterized.

Central to the discontent has been the passage by Congress, at the urging of the President, of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003. Virtually all of the attention, and ire, of grassroots conservatives has been directed at the price tag of the bill – an estimated $395-500 billion over the next ten years. Yet hardly any attention has been given to the overall provisions of the bill, many of which are consistent with conservative principles, and which indeed were supported by many conservatives in Congress. Because many the provisions of the bill reflect conservative principles, it is very likely that the estimated price tag of the bill is overstated since a major goal of the reform legislation is to reduce the overall future costs of Medicare, and health care in general, as the provisions of the bill take hold.

While the prescription drug benefit for the fee-for-service side of Medicare has received virtually all the popular attention, other provisions of the reform legislation include:

-- enhancing the ability of Americans to pay for their own health needs through expanding the availability of Health Savings Accounts (HSAs);
-- new accounting measures which will enhance accuracy in monitoring the solvency of the overall Medicare program;
-- expanding lower-cost choices in medical coverage for senior Americans rather than placing all into the traditional (and more expensive) fee-for-service side of Medicare;
-- reducing the rising cost of prescription drugs across the board; and
-- cost-containment provisions including income thresholds for Medicare Part B premiums starting in 2007 (the higher the income of an individual or a couple, the less the federal subsidy, and the higher the premium paid for Medicare coverage), and an increase in the Medicare Part B deductible with future raises in the deductible indexed to inflation.

Prescription drug coverage -- Incorporating the efficiencies of the private sector

The provision of the Medicare reform bill attracting the most attention is the prescription drug benefit. The big reason for this is that the drug benefit is admittedly the most costly aspect of the bill. But it should be pointed out that even the large estimated cost associated with the drug benefit is simply that -- an estimate -- and an estimate that is based on, if you will, a "worst-case scenario." The actual cost of the drug benefit is not known, and may end up being much lower than the Congressional Budget Office has projected.

One aspect which could result in this benefit being not as expensive as anticipated is that it is not actually an entitlement in the traditional sense of government assistance programs. First, the drug benefit program is voluntary; while available to every Medicare beneficiary, not every beneficiary will accept the benefit. In actuality, it is not a traditional government-run program at all. The Medicare prescription drug benefit will be made available through private drug benefit insurance companies or health plans which will administer the benefit. The benefit will, literally, be run as a commercial benefit plan, not as a traditional government program.

Similar to any private sector benefit plan, the Medicare drug benefit will require a monthly premium paid by the beneficiary; it will requirement the payment of an annual deductible; and once the deductible is paid, the benefit program requires a "coinsurance" cost paid by the beneficiary -- a 25% cost-sharing up to $2,250 of drug expenses. Such cost-sharing provisions have proven effective in controlling the cost of health care coverage.

Because the drug benefit is voluntary, Medicare beneficiaries are not required to buy into it. Many Medicare beneficiaries already have some form of Medicare supplemental coverage which includes a drug benefit, so they will likely be disinclined to sign up for the new Medicare drug benefit. Also, an aspect of the Medicare reform bill is to introduce competition between the Medicare program and private sector plans. There may be drug coverage products in the commercial market which provide a better deal to Medicare beneficiaries than what the Medicare reform bill provides. Another aspect of the Medicare reform bill is the enhancement of the managed care side of Medicare. Many of the existing private health plan products offered as an alternative to the fee-for-service side of Medicare already contain a prescription drug benefit, hence, the cost of drugs is already being paid by Medicare for those enrolled in such plans, which means that for these beneficiaries there will be no increase experienced in paying for their drug coverage. And since these plans will be offering comprehensive or "full-service" medical benefits, including prescription drugs, the cost to the consumer of the health plan's drug benefit may actually be less than the cost of the benefit as designed by the Medicare reform bill.

Additionally, the very inclusion of a drug benefit to Medicare will reduce the cost of the program. For example, prior to this reform, Medicare paid for extended hospital stays for ulcer surgery at a cost of about $28,000 per patient. Yet Medicare would not pay for the drugs which eliminate the cause of most ulcers, drugs that cost about $500 a year. Now, drug coverage under Medicare will allow seniors to replace more expensive surgeries and hospitalizations with less expensive prescription medicine to treat their conditions.

In short, while the Medicare drug benefit is available to all beneficiaries (those in the fee-for-service side, as well as in the managed care side), and since the cost estimates are largely based on the assumption that most will take advantage of the new benefit, the price tag placed in the drug benefit may actually be on the high side since many beneficiaries already have a drug benefit, or commercial products may provide a better deal than what the bill's design provides.

Reducing the Cost of Drugs

The bill also contains provisions, unrelated to Medicare, which will lower the cost of all drugs -- benefiting not only Medicare beneficiaries and the program, but every consumer. The law injects competition into the Medicare marketplace, which will drive down the price of drugs. Private health plans have largely been successful in negotiating discounts with pharmaceutical manufacturers. Beneficiaries enrolled in a Medicare prescription drug program or a Medicare Advantage program will reap additional savings, since these plans will likely combine the attributes of a private insurance company and a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM). PBMs are designed, in part, to negotiate discounts with pharmacies and drug manufacturers on behalf of health plans.

In addition, to help American consumers of all ages, the new law provides incentives to encourage the use of generic name drugs, which are usually less expensive than brand-name drugs. The law also streamlines the bureaucratic process to bring generic drugs to the market faster.

Expanding Health Care Choices

One of the main cost-containment aspects of the Medicare reform bill is the creation of a new "Medicare Advantage" program to replace the "Medicare+Choice" program established by the Republican Congress in 1997.

"Medicare+Choice" (M+C) was the addition of a managed care side to the Medicare program, providing a cost-effective option to the more costly fee-for-service design of traditional Medicare. Medicare+Choice was intended to bring the efficiencies of the commercial managed care design into Medicare. However, the funding formula for M+C in relation to the traditional fee-for-service side established by the Clinton Administration never enabled M+C to prove its promise of cost containment. (Some have speculated that the Clinton Administration's disdain for the commercial managed care industry after it helped defeat "HillaryCare" in 1994 motivated it to choke the life out of M+C before it could prove it's worth; clearly, the Clinton Administration never intended to allow M+C to succeed.)

As a revamped managed care side of the program, Medicare Advantage will allow beneficiaries a wider range of health coverage products, including preferred provider organizations (PPO) and HMO options, opening up the Medicare program to commercial health coverage designs which have proven more cost-effective than traditional fee-for-service indemnity insurance products. These more cost-effective alternatives will enable both the beneficiary, and the government, to share in anticipated cost savings.

According to a recent survey conducted by the American Association of Health Plans of commercial plans intending to sell products to the Medicare market, Medicare-Advantage beneficiaries will see immediate improvement in their coverage over current Medicare coverage, at an overall cost savings to the Medicare program due to the managed care approach. For example:

-- Lower cost sharing: The management of coverage built into the Medicare Advantage program will allow plans to lower monthly premiums, in some cases dramatically. As an example, one health plan in New England will decrease its premiums by an average of 23% -- with beneficiaries saving as much as $67 per month compared to current out-of-pocket costs; there is also expected to be a reduction in the cost of co-pays and deductibles.
-- Enhanced benefits: In addition to prescription drugs, many plans will be able to provide benefits not found in the traditional Medicare design, such as preventive screenings (e.g., for prostate or breast cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease) which will enable diseases to be found earlier enhancing the likelihood of cure and lowering the long-term costs of treatment, and disease management programs.
-- Increased enrollment: After five years of slow growth and declining availability of private plans available through the Medicare+Choice program, plans are now expecting to add -- not subtract -- beneficiaries in the program. That is a strong sign of confidence in the direction of Medicare reform, and will result in greater cost savings for the Medicare program overall as more beneficiaries opt for the Medicare Advantage program.
-- New Products: A number of companies which intend to market products through the Medicare Advantage program plan to also offer Health Savings Accounts, drug discount cards, and new Medigap packages in addition to the basic scope of benefits guaranteed to Medicare beneficiaries. The reform legislation passed by Congress enables modernization of the Medicare program through the joining of product innovations brought in by the private sector.
-- Coordination of benefits: An element of the commercial health care marketplace, this practice has resulted in slower increases in health coverage premiums than have been experienced in the standard indemnity market. It will not be an element of Medicare through the Medicare Advantage program.

Summary

The passage of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 will provide all Medicare beneficiaries with the option of a standardized prescription drug benefit, but the bill also contains provisions which move the Medicare program on a path of privatization, introducing competition into the system, and expanding the quality of benefits and care to beneficiaries while instituting new cost-containment methods. The estimated cost of the reforms -- primarily the drug benefit provision -- are admittedly hefty. But the conservative principles of competition, private sector administration of the drug benefit, innovation in administration of benefits, and cost-containment provisions, could very likely bring down the overall cost of the program, while bringing Medicare coverage up to the level and quality of private benefit plans, and into the 21st Century.

(This overview of the Medicare reform bill was produced, in part, from information from the following sources):

http://frist.senate.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=Issues.Detail&Issue_id=27

http://rpc.senate.gov/_files/MedicareModernization011604DM2.pdf

http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/medicare/index.html


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: atrw; gop; healthcare; healthcarereform; medicare; medicarereform
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To: ilovew
True. In this case, the government needs to spend money to save money, because it will be spending new money toward more effective and less-expensive treatment alternatives (i.e., medications) than Medicare has traditionally paid for (i.e., hospital stays and surgery).
61 posted on 02/06/2004 1:07:32 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: prairiebreeze
To Edwards and his ilk, the "little guy" is the moron who spills hot coffee on his lap while pulling away from the drive-up window at McDonalds. The "little guy" deserves to sue the hell out of McDonalds so the price of Big Macs goes up for everyone else...or McDonalds starts serving lukewarm coffee. This is Edwards vision of the "American Dream."
62 posted on 02/06/2004 1:11:17 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: afraidfortherepublic
As an employer, I was hit with the excessive cost for insurance coverage for employees over 50. It is really easy to see why older workers are let go -- They raise the cost of the whole pool.

Thanks for helping me understand why I believe I experienced age discrimination and disparate treatment in the workplace.

63 posted on 02/06/2004 1:11:52 PM PST by Ciexyz
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To: Ciexyz; All
All we've been seeing on FR is people screaming about the cost and threatening to bolt the party, with inflammatory language like "why should we pay for a bunch of old geezers."

This might be an appropriate place to vent....

The screamers you refer to -- the "purists" -- wrinkle their noses at this fact, but elections are won in the middle. The left is always going to vote predominantly for the Democrat. Conservatives (even if they grumble) are going to vote for the Republican. The independent voter in the middle decides elections. No hard-right candidate is ever going to win, just as no hard-left candidate is never going to win. I believe that the majority of the nation's swing voters are people who, for want of a better term, are "moderately conservative." They aren't conservative necessarily in ideology, because they don't think about the basis of their political convictions, if they think about politics at all. But while not ideologically conservative, I believe they are conservative in their instincts -- generally conservative in lifestyle, concerned about high taxes, traditional in their moral and cultural views -- but they also support certain government programs (e.g., Medicare, Social Security, and the welfare safety net, provided this safety net isn't abused by deadbeats). To win elections, we have to have a candidate who appeals to this moderately conservative middle...a candidate kind of like George W. Bush. Bill Clinton understood this, which is why if you go back and look at his campaign rhetoric in 1992, he sounded like a moderate Republican. We knew better, but the conservative middle felt comfortable with him.

The purists on the right never understand this. They sit in their ivory towers and look for reasons why they should oppose people whom they likely agree with two-thirds of the time. If the purists had their way, not only would we never elect a conservative as President, we'd never elect even a centrist with some conservative leanings. If the purists had their way, the left would win ever election. The purists aren't interested in winning elections, which is why they always threaten to "leave" the Republican Party. They get their jollys by sniping at those who aren't as "pure" as they are, which amounts to about 98% of the electorate.

We'll never get a pure conservative agenda out of GW Bush, because we'll never get a pure conservative agenda out of any candidate who actually has a chance to win. Even Ronald Reagan kept us in the UN, didn't eliminate the Dept. of Education, signed the Brady Bill, gave illegals amnesty, and signed a tax increase. The best we can hope for is to get someone in who will take care of the big issues -- appointing solid judges to restore the original intent of the Constitution; promoting American values and sovereignty in the world; resisting tax increases; holding of traditional values. We have this in GW Bush. The fact that these genuinely conservative aspects of Bush's instincts don't seem to impress the purists tells me that many of them aren't as "pure" as they try to appear.

Which brings me to this observation: Have you noted those occasional posts where some "purist" says that Bush isn't 65% of what they want – he’s more like 25% of what they want? The reason you see these curious declarations is that those "conservatives" care only about one thing -- government spending. What I've seen lately on FR are people who will skewer GW Bush on federal spending, and then will sniff at issues like the character of his judicial appointments, or his defense of American values in the world. These people are not conservatives. They are cranks who have adopted a lazy form of "conservatism", namely, "keep your hand out of my pocket!" All they care about, if you'll notice, is "their money," and their perception of what the government does with it. Have you ever seen one of these knuckleheads talk about the importance of judicial nominations, or the culture wars, or the defense of American ideals in a dangerous and hostile world? No. That is because they are not really conservatives. Frankly, I am very suspect of anyone who bitches about government spending, and then shows no alarm at the possibility of electing a John Kerry and giving him the ability to appoint up to perhaps four Supreme Court justices between 2005 and 2008. Anyone who shows no concern over this possibility isn't a "pure" conservative at all.

64 posted on 02/06/2004 1:16:32 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: ilovew
Please include me in your generalizations.

Please reconsider my point.

The original poster had pointed out that there were reforms in the new medicare entitlement that proved it was truly a conservative victory.

I suggested that these reforms could have been enacted without additional hundreds of billions being taken from the taxpayers and given to the recipients.

If I ever said that if we don't spend money on anything the country will be better off, (while sitting back, of course), then please cite the occurrence.

If you cannot, then you might just want to admit you're a liar and apologize.

Additionally, I might infer that because you feel that adding a new entitlement to already bloated budget is "something very important", you might just be one of those big government loving liberals, but that's not true is it?
65 posted on 02/06/2004 1:50:35 PM PST by WhiteGuy (Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press...)
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To: My2Cents
then shows no alarm at the possibility of electing a John Kerry and giving him the ability to appoint up to perhaps four Supreme Court justices between 2005 and 2008. Anyone who shows no concern over this possibility isn't a "pure" conservative at all.

Whoa, Nellie.... Kerry would be a certain 2005-2008 but a probable 2005-2012. Folks thought it would be easy to knock Clinton out after one term, especially given all his fraud and scandal... it's actually very difficult to knock out a standing President unless you get help from their own side :-(

66 posted on 02/06/2004 2:07:31 PM PST by Tamzee (W '04..... America may not survive a Democrat at this point in our history....)
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To: Tamsey
There you go. Frankly, I'm heartened by the jobs news today, and also by a post I saw on the US leading the world in a global recovery. If the voters won't turn out a corrupt and vile personage such as the "Big He," Bill Clinton, because the economy was going well, they're not going to turn out an honorable, decent, courageous, and decisive President when the economy is going well.
67 posted on 02/06/2004 2:27:21 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: My2Cents
What .. we're suppose to read the bill before complaining? /s>
68 posted on 02/06/2004 2:28:23 PM PST by Mo1 (Join the dollar a day crowd now!)
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To: My2Cents; gatorbait
The naysayers in their kneejerk opposition to the President's goals here should take a good look at who they are allied with on this issue

Wait!!!!

What's that I hear???

Chants from the naysayers????

SHHHHHHHHH, listen!!!


Oh, it's just the crickets.

Never mind.

69 posted on 02/06/2004 2:40:10 PM PST by Neets (I always feel like somebody's watching me.~)
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To: My2Cents
Thank you!!
70 posted on 02/06/2004 2:40:28 PM PST by Neets (I always feel like somebody's watching me.~)
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To: Mo1
What .. we're suppose to read the bill before complaining?

This is a corollary to, "Don't confuse me with the facts!"

71 posted on 02/06/2004 3:01:38 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: Neets
LOL....The sound of the howler monkeys picking fleas off each other.
72 posted on 02/06/2004 3:02:57 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: Neets
These guys?


73 posted on 02/06/2004 3:08:03 PM PST by Tamzee (W '04..... America may not survive a Democrat at this point in our history....)
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To: Tamsey
Well, more like these:


74 posted on 02/06/2004 3:09:57 PM PST by Neets (I always feel like somebody's watching me.~)
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To: My2Cents
My2Cents: You've done an outstanding job of using the facts to remind everyone that this is a Conservative approach to solving a problem that isn't just going to go away.

I heartily agree with you that the first step in achieving these further goals is to re-elect Pres. Bush, and to put more Republicans in Congress this year.

Well done, my FRiend!

75 posted on 02/06/2004 3:18:38 PM PST by arasina (So there.)
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To: arasina
Thanks arasina. That's what we're hear for...to promote our conservative values, and to keep the 'Rats out of power.
76 posted on 02/06/2004 3:20:56 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: My2Cents
hear = here....Sheesh.
77 posted on 02/06/2004 3:21:34 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: Neets
Neets,

ROFL!!! THAT is one of the funniest things I've ever seen here... boy, you're good :-)



78 posted on 02/06/2004 3:24:50 PM PST by Tamzee (W '04..... America may not survive a Democrat at this point in our history....)
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To: Tamsey
;-)
79 posted on 02/06/2004 3:27:40 PM PST by Neets (I always feel like somebody's watching me.~)
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To: Ol' Sparky
If there was a true interest in reducing the cost of prescription drugs, seniors would be given greater access to buy drugs on the free market from countries like Canada and Mexico

Non starter.Geez , you sound like NBCCBSABCCNNCNBCMSNBC here. Do you have the first clue why it appears to be so much cheaper outside the US and why your suggestion, though I am certain is heart felt, is head wrong? You can tell me because if you think about it, you have the answer.(hint-part of the problem is one of the Democrat Presidential wannabees)

80 posted on 02/06/2004 3:28:41 PM PST by gatorbait (Yesterday, today and tomorrow......The United States Army)
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