As we have already mentioned, CMS is planning to lower the insurer reimbursement for Medicare Advantage for the second year in a row. This is despite the fact that, like every other business in this economy, providers and insurers are experiencing steep cost increases. There are some in Congress and in the business world who think these cuts are an attempt to kill the program by making it less popular.
Why do radical leftists insist on doing away with Medicare Advantage when it remains a part of the public plan? The government’s involvement makes it more difficult for bureaucrats to determine each person’s healthcare needs compared to traditional Medicare, and the ideology of politicians like Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dictates that everyone should suffer through the same terrible fate.
In her March 19 letter to Brooks-Lasure, Republican from North Carolina Rep. Virginia Foxx explains:
Medicare Advantage (MA) plans provide seniors with better value in healthcare than traditional Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) plans while still meeting their high medical needs. Reduced costs, care coordination, out-of-pocket spending limitations, and additional benefits including prescription, dental, and vision coverage are among the many advantages that seniors who enroll in MA plans enjoy, sometimes without paying anything more. Customers are able to take advantage of this since MA plans are highly competitive and strive to provide greater coverage and services at cheaper rates compared to government-run FFS Medicare.
In the letter, Foxx and forty-four other Republican House members voiced their concern that this well-liked and productive program is not getting enough funding. As a further point, he subtly raised the possibility that this is an intentional program.
“Given this performance history, it is puzzling why the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) have proposed an almost 0.2% decrease to the payment rate for Medicare Advantage insurers for 2025. This comes after MA already cut its prices by 1.12% in 2024. Seniors and the MA program will suffer as a result, since insurance firms offering the plans have already hinted that they may cut plan benefits. It is reasonable to question whether seniors in Massachusetts will continue to have access to such a diverse array of options in light of these changes occurring so rapidly. If these alternatives do not receive the necessary support, they will decline, resulting in fewer benefits, less affordable coverage options, and more out-of-pocket costs for seniors.
Legislators requested CMS to review Medicare Advantage adjustments; they anticipate disclosing these changes in the final rate announcement “on or before April 1, 2024,” but it’s unlikely that CMS bureaucrats will give the request any weight. They go on to say, “We are troubled about the predicted effective growth rate for 2025,” expressing concern that it will ignore the rise in prices and inflation, exacerbate financing disparities, and disregard financial realities.
Author: Steven Sinclaire