INTERESTING STUFF – 27 August 2010
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GRAY MATTERS: The Downside of Medicare

SaulFriedman75x75 Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Saul Friedman (bio) writes the weekly Gray Matters column which appears here each Saturday. Links to past Gray Matters columns can be found here. Saul's Reflections column, in which he comments on news, politics and social issues from his perspective as one of the younger members of the greatest generation, also appears at Time Goes By twice each month.


Those of us of a certain age sing the praises of Medicare which, thanks to the recently passed health reforms, according to the latest report of the trustees, has a new lease on life. It will serve the needs of upwards of 45 million disabled and people over 65 for longer than some banks and businesses will be around.

That is to say, the life of the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund has been extended 12 years to 2029. That fund, if you don’t know, pays for Medicare Part A, which includes hospitalization, and rehabilitation or skilled nursing care after, say, an accident or surgery, and for some home care.

In addition, the Obama administration’s bean counters estimate that the new health care overhaul, Medicare Part B – which pays part of the cost of labs and physician visits – will save $8 billion by the end of next year and a whopping $575 billion over the next ten years.

That’s something people over 65 and those approaching retirement to celebrate. Medicare will be there when employment benefits run out.

But Medicare, which was passed 45 years ago, is far from the universal health care that we one day hope to have. Unless a beneficiary has supplementary coverage from a former employer, Medicare’s deductibles and premiums or the Medigap policies to cover those costs have gotten expensive.

If you don’t yet qualify for Social Security (or haven’t had 40 or more quarters of Medicare-covered employment), Part A’s premium (normally free) can cost from $254 to $461 a month. A hospital stay will cost $1,100 for up to 60 days, $275 a day for days 61-90 and $550 a day after that.

Part B, as you know, costs most beneficiaries $96.40 a month, but much more if you are a bit affluent because Medicare under George W. Bush instituted means testing for the first time. It also carries a yearly deductible of $155, which goes up every year.

Part B covers 80 percent of the bills, with those out-of-pocket costs going up. And Part D is an added expense if you need prescription drugs and fall victim to the doughnut hole. Medicare is saving that $8 billion a year mentioned above by cutting Medicare Advantage for 10 million beneficiaries. That’s the right move, in my view, but it’s an indication that Medicare penalizes some people who were hoping to get more coverage.

We could have done better than Medicare or the cumbersome health reforms, most of which won’t take effect until 2014, if the nation wasn’t so stuck in an ideological rut.

One great alternative is called socialized medicine and it’s practiced right here in the U.S. - the Veterans Administration hospitals and health services. And its beneficiaries, non-socialists all, have included the four star generals now running our wars as well as Senator John McCain and many members of Congress.

Although they are not run by the VA, among the socialized institutions that have tended to the needs of presidents as well as lawmakers, are Walter Reed Hospital, in Washington, D.C., run by the Army, and the Bethesda Naval Hospital in the Maryland suburbs.

A few years ago, millions of Americans and I were beneficiaries of the VA health system when it developed, along with Merck and California researchers, an effective vaccine for the dreaded shingles. That was just one of the innovations credited to the VA in a new edition of a book, The Best Care Anywhere, with the subtitle, “Why VA Healthcare Is Better than Yours.”

Written by Phillip Longman, a professional demographer, and a fellow at the New America Foundation and the Washington Monthly, the book tells the story of the quality revolution launched by Dr. Ken Kizer when he took over the VA health system in 1994.

According to the Century Foundation’s Health Beat blog, Longman’s book includes “eye-popping evidence” based on peer-reviewed research

“...that when it comes to everything from outcomes to patient satisfaction and patient safety, the VA out performs. Most people don’t associate the VA with innovation. But a majority of its doctors have faculty appointments at academic institutions, one reason that the VA is on the cutting edge of evidence-based, patient centered medicine.”

Over the years, Longman reports, “the VA has been responsible for developing the CT-scanner, the first artificial kidney, the cardiac pacemaker, the first successful liver transplant, the nicotine patch,” and the shingles vaccine.”

The VA installed the VistA software program, the centerpiece of the VA’s electronic medical record system, which is now used elsewhere. With the use of the software, Longman writes that the VA system, in which everyone - doctors, researchers, nurses and technicians who work for the VA -

“...is the only health care provider in the U.S. whose cost per patient has been holding steady in recent years.”

Dr. Donald Berwick, the new head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services wrote on the back cover of Longman’s book,

“The improvement of the VA health care system in the past decade is one of the most impressive stories of large-scale change.”

Who says government can’t do anything right?

In this case (as in many civilized nations), socialized medicine works, but it’s doubtful that the VA system will serve as a model for health reform in the U.S. We blindly reject “socialism”without knowing what it is. But we veterans know how it can be helpful in obtaining good treatment and cheap prescription drugs. Unfortunately, budget cuts over the last eight years have forced the VA to sharply limit eligibility for its health system.

While searching for alternatives to Medicare and the inadequate health reforms, I came across a paper published earlier this month on “the impact of universal national health insurance on population health” in Taiwan, of all places, a successful bastion of free enterprise on the doorstep of communist China.

Taiwan established its National Health Insurance in 1995, which covers more than 98 percent of Taiwanese, at the cost of small co-payments. In the years after the system became effective, the paper reported, deaths from

“...causes amenable to health care” declined by nearly six percent a year. The decline was highest among the young and the old and was “associated with substantial reductions in deaths from circulatory disorders for men, whilst an earlier upward trend in female cancer deaths was reversed.”

The U.S. might have had something similar to Taiwan’s NHI, Medicare For All, except for the timidity of Barack Obama, who did not have the courage of his own convictions, and the ignorance of conservative Republicans and Democrats who worried more about their political futures than the health care of their constituents.

Republicans would have had trouble attacking “Medicare For All.” It’s easier to call for the repeal of the confusing “Obama care.”

We pay for this ideological narrowness with lives; in contrast to the good news of Taiwan’s NHI, the U.S. has the worst rate of amenable mortality among 19 industrialized nations, with more than 100,000 deaths per year from disorders amenable to health care.

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Comments

At last I can comment on your excellent post.

Anybody with half a brain knows that the single payer health system is more efficient, saves money and results in better health care. The politicians surely know this, too. So why do they fight it? Follow the money.

"The U.S. might have had something similar to Taiwan’s NHI, Medicare For All, except for the timidity of Barack Obama, who did not have the courage of his own convictions, and the ignorance of conservative Republicans and Democrats who worried more about their political futures than the health care of their constituents."

I don't agree with you on this, Saul. I recommend The Heart of Power: Health and Politics in the Oval Office (Blumenthal and Morone). The history and politics of health care are complex and formidable: It may well have more moving parts than any other domestic policy issue.

Although the book covers the Roosevelt through Bush II administrations, one is left with the conclusion that we have what we have because of President Obama's commitment, persistence, and courage: The plain fact is that Obama delivered where Roosevelt feared to tread, Truman wouldn't act, Kennedy and Clinton failed, and Carter barely tried.

To effect as sweeping a change as Medicare for All in the face of an institutional obstacle course consisting of the insurance industry, the pharmaceutical companies, the medical establishment, the political establishment, big business, small business, the media, the right, and the perfectionist left takes more than a slogan: It requires mass mobilization at the movement level, and that doesn't exist.

By eliminating the Advantage plan you will be forcing people to buy Medigap policies which most people will not be able to afford. Also there is this problem will Medicare in which they are only going to pay 80% and the deductible of $1082 each time they go into hospital. Most people I see with Advantage will never have the money to pay for a Medigap policy much less the extra 20% which medicare does not pay. Then I guess the hospitals / Doctors will write off what is not paid by poor folks and eventually the doctors/Hospitals will not see people with straight medicare?

I am blessed. I was forced into into retirement and kept getting rejected by Social Security for years despite a having had a serious disability for years. The result was that I got my medical care at a local hospital's clinic where my care was by residents in family practice and the quality varied greatly and at times, left me screaming in frustration. Over a year ago I decided that since Medicare kicked had finally kicked in, maybe I should look for better health care. I quickly discovered that some doctors would not take accept Medicare/Medicaid patients. However, when I checked a practice "founded in 1972 by a group of physicians who envisioned a non-profit physician group practice as a unique mechanism to bring high quality medical care to the community." Since I knew a couple of the doctors from my former parish and other activities, I called the foundation and explained my situation and they took my information and said they would call me and let me know if I was accepted.
A couple
days later I got a call telling me I had been accepted (!) and had an appointment with a lovely young internist who is pleasant and thorough and discovered that the foundation is a wondrous place -- it's almost a mini-hospital with it's own lab and radiology departments and has ties to the best specialists in the city. AND I have never had a bill from them. They accept what Medicare covers.
The only doctor I have who isn't in the foundation is my endocrinologist who I met because he donated a day a month to the hospital's clinic and was the bright spot in my care there. He runs his practice similarly to the Foundation and accepts what Medicare pays.
It's nice to know that not everyone is greedy in this big bad world and I thank God every day for these good people.
Yes, I have some medical bills from the old days but I make a payment monthly and chip away at the balance.
I'm just grateful that I was
accepted by the foundation and that they take such good care of me.
I'd like to think that there are more doctors like mine out there who truly believe their Hippocratic oath so look around.

The recognition of the quality of VA Healthcare for Veterans is long overdue. All too often all one hears are the stories of poor patient treatment which may occur anytime at any healthcare sitting . It's amazing how many times I've heard from men in their late 50s and 60s who wish they had served in the Military during their draftable years. To know they had served when called, instead of going to Canada or hiding in College, is a reality more feel than one might surmise. When I talk about prescription drugs for eight dollars and the quality of care I get, those who don't qualify are envious, for sure. God Bless the USA and the remarkable Veterans Administration Health Care Sysrem.

I wonder why I don't see/hear any discussion about Plan F. It covers the Medicare deductible and the 20% that Plan A does not cover.
And one can budget for it, because you pay monthly.

We added up the amount my spouse was 'out of pocket' a few years ago, and the Plan F was a savings to her even then and is even more so as her needs increase.

It IS a Medigap policy, and I see that it is not really easy to find on the medicare.gov site, so here is a link:
http://www.medicare.gov/MPPF/Include/DataSection/Questions/SearchOptions.asp

The info you get is based on your location.
Check it out. We find it very helpful mainly because we know exactly what Joel's out of pocket medical expenses will be every month.

I truly wish that the policy makers would create a health care agenda for the populace in this country that is modeled on the Veteran's Administration Health Care System. The VA, an arm of government that worked it's tail off to create and administer a bureaucratic institution that actually works, and it is ignored as a model. Pffft.

Sadly, I think Darlene is right. The money tracks into an entirely different direction than what is best for the country.

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