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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
4. Private Insurers Have Cost Medicare $282.6 Billion in Excess Payments Since 1985
Wed Oct 24, 2012, 08:10 PM
Oct 2012

BUT WHO'S COUNTING?

http://www.enewspf.com/opinion/analysis/37294-private-insurers-have-cost-medicare-2826-billion-in-excess-payments-since-1985.html

Researchers say privately run Medicare Advantage plans have undermined traditional Medicare’s fiscal health and taken a heavy toll on taxpayers, seniors and the U.S. economy...In the first study of its kind, a group of health policy experts has determined the amount of money that Medicare has overpaid private insurance companies under the Medicare Advantage program and its predecessors over the past 27 years and come up with a startling figure: $282.6 billion in excess payments, most of them over the past eight years. That’s wasted money that should have been spent on improving patient care, shoring up Medicare’s trust fund or reducing the federal deficit, the researchers say.

The findings appear in an article by Drs. Ida Hellander, Steffie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein titled “Medicare overpayments to private plans, 1985-2012.” The article was released online today and is forthcoming in the International Journal of Health Services.
Hellander is policy director at Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), a nonprofit research and advocacy group. Woolhandler and Himmelstein are professors at the City University of New York School of Public Health, visiting professors at Harvard Medical School and co-founders of PNHP. The article appears at a time when some lawmakers, including vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan, have proposed a dramatic expansion of private Medicare plans and criticized the Obama administration for the modest cuts in the overpayments contained in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). However, the administration has also touted the fact that private plans are on the upswing.

Private Medicare plans – previously referred to as Medicare HMOs and now called Medicare Advantage plans – have been in existence for about three decades. Such plans, most of them for-profit, currently cover about 27 percent of Medicare enrollees and have been growing at a fast clip. UnitedHealth and Humana are among the largest players in this market, and together operate about one-third of such plans. Medicare pays these privately run plans a set “premium” per enrollee for hospital and physician services (averaging $10,123 in 2012) based on a prediction of how costly the enrollee’s care will be. The authors find that private insurers have exploited loopholes to garner overpayments above and beyond what it costs them to care for their enrollees. For instance, Medicare gives private insurers a full premium for each enrollee, even for those who get most of their care for free at the Veterans Health Administration. In addition, through heavy lobbying, the insurance industry induced Congress and the Bush administration to add bonus payments to Medicare Advantage premiums beginning in 2003.

Finally, private plans cherry-pick by enrolling seniors whose care will cost far less than the premiums, guaranteeing large profits. Although private plans must accept all seniors who choose to enroll, they cherry-picked by selectively recruiting the healthiest seniors through advertising, office location, etc., and induced sicker ones to disenroll by making expensive care inconvenient. After Medicare began risk adjusting the premium payment for each patient’s diagnoses in 2004, the plans began cherry-picking in a new way. They recruited otherwise healthy seniors with very mild (and inexpensive) cases of sometimes serious conditions – automatically triggering higher premiums from the risk-adjustment scheme, but escaping payments for expensive care. For instance, many seniors have very mild cases of arthritis, heart failure and bronchitis that require little or no treatment. The full report includes further details on these and other schemes that private insurers have used to increase their Medicare payments.

“We’ve long known that Medicare has been paying private insurers more than if their enrollees had stayed in traditional free-for-service Medicare, but no one has assessed the full extent of these overpayments,” said Dr. Ida Hellander, lead author of the study. “Nor has anyone systematically examined the many ways that private insurers have gamed the system to maximize their bottom line at taxpayers’ expense.”

“In 2012 alone, private insurers are being overpaid $34.1 billion, or $2,526 per Medicare Advantage enrollee,” Hellander said.
OOOH! excellent cartoon! Demeter Oct 2012 #1
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Sickening! hamerfan Oct 2012 #9
Ditto DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #28
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The fucking bankers should have been dragged out of their homes and......... Hotler Oct 2012 #31
What these institutions fail to realize when they make these 'decisions'.... AnneD Oct 2012 #45
Nobody does it better than our own AnneD Demeter Oct 2012 #47
Thank you, thank you very much... AnneD Oct 2012 #51
Private Insurers Have Cost Medicare $282.6 Billion in Excess Payments Since 1985 Demeter Oct 2012 #4
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FROM DAILY RECKONING EMAIL Demeter Oct 2012 #6
The money guy reminded me recently about Warpy Oct 2012 #8
Perhaps..... AnneD Oct 2012 #50
I'm a relatively small fish, too Warpy Oct 2012 #52
My tangible commodities .... AnneD Oct 2012 #55
Intangible commodities are also going to be important Warpy Oct 2012 #56
The soft skills.... AnneD Oct 2012 #57
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So let's try this with a Black inner-city YA in designer clothes and a bread_and_roses Oct 2012 #30
no, mr demille -- i am NOT ready for my close up... xchrom Oct 2012 #10
Great caption for the photo! hamerfan Oct 2012 #16
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Sounds like US Foreign Policy, IMO Demeter Oct 2012 #32
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Not under a German Thumb, It Can't Demeter Oct 2012 #33
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I'd be happier if the Government would stop stealing our rights and property Demeter Oct 2012 #24
oy. that's a lot. xchrom Oct 2012 #25
This stealing has been going on for so long, hasn't everything been stolen?!! DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #29
Just about Demeter Oct 2012 #34
A History of Central Banking in the United States By The Daily Reckoning Demeter Oct 2012 #27
Good morning everyone. Have a good day and stay safe. Peace! nt. Hotler Oct 2012 #35
hi hotler xchrom Oct 2012 #37
Stay out of trouble, Hotler! Demeter Oct 2012 #43
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There were no plans to "fix" Greece Demeter Oct 2012 #44
Ozymandias II Demeter Oct 2012 #40
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It isn't working... Demeter Oct 2012 #48
U.S. sues BofA, calling loan fraud 'brazen' Demeter Oct 2012 #49
14 minutes after the polls close on the 6th Po_d Mainiac Oct 2012 #53
That's my fear, too Demeter Oct 2012 #54
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