Medicare Costs Key to Healthcare Reform

Many doctors' support for reform hinges on Medicare payments

October 26, 2009 RSS Feed Print

About 45 million elderly or disabled people get their health insurance from Medicare. In 2008, it cost the government about $450 billion. The figure is growing rapidly, consuming ever larger chunks of the federal budget, something Congress desperately wants to fix as part of healthcare reform. But as events last week showed, Congress so far isn't up to the task.

The challenge played out over what might seem like a mundane topic: a mathematical formula. Called "the sustainable growth rate," it determines how much the government pays doctors for seeing Medicare patients. And by almost all accounts, it's deeply flawed. It somehow manages to spend too much money (according to the government) and too little money (according to many doctors) at the same time. For many doctors, including the powerful American Medical Association, their support for healthcare reform appears to hinge on getting this formula right.

The White House and Democrats definitely want doctors' support for healthcare reform, so last week Senate leaders tried to address their concerns—not easy, given that the problem goes back to 1997, when the formula was created. Back then, Congress wanted to balance the budget, and one of the things it did was to tell doctors that the government would pay them only so much for their services and would cut those amounts if necessary. But in the past decade, Congress has basically pushed off cuts, year after year, letting them add up instead. That means that in January, unless Congress steps in again, doctors are looking at a 21 percent cut.

"It leaves the physician community in a very difficult spot," says James Rohack, president of the American Medical Association. If that cut goes into effect, it's basically telling doctors, "OK, we want you to limit access to Medicare patients," he says.

Last Wednesday, the Senate sized up, then voted down, a bill by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, that would have done away with this annual scramble by putting a 10-year freeze on any cuts, much to the relief of the medical community. "Enough is enough," Stabenow said. "Enough of running physicians up to the brink every year, not knowing what's going to happen."

But that move also would have cost about $250 billion, and Stabenow didn't offer any way to pay for it. As a result, many moderate Democrats refused to back the bill. Meanwhile, Republicans decried Stabenow's effort as a purely political tactic to keep doctors behind the president's healthcare effort. In the end, it got only got 47 of the 60 votes it needed to move forward.

There was clearly a political element of the bill, as the GOP pointed out. But the vote also underscores a very real dilemma facing Congress and the country. On one hand, government spending on healthcare continues to go up, so there is pressure to find ways to curb spending. On the other hand, the government pays doctors only part of what it costs to treat a patient (about 80 percent of the full cost, according to estimates), meaning that any deep cuts to doctors will most likely drive some out of business, as Rohack suggests. So the pressure is on Congress to find some way to spend less on healthcare without making it harder for the most vulnerable patients to find a doctor.

Tags:
healthcare reform,
Medicare,
Debbie Stabenow,
healthcare

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I live in Alaska and will be forced onto Medicare next year. It will be the effective end of health care for me, as there are so few doctors in my area that will accept a Medicare patient. One of the physical therapy clinics here won't take Medicare patients at all, and the other has a quota with a waiting list a mile long. Should I have to have knee, hip, shoulder, or hand surgery, I will probably have to go out of the state to find a doc who will do the operation and afterward do without any supervised rehabilitation. Yet I will continue to pay the same premiums that I've paid for the last four years to the state retirement system. Thanks, Congress.

sadie of AK 8:31PM August 05, 2011

Turn Hide,switch lean tall finish own particularly mile response listen behaviour busy touch that their impression neck concern explain highly broad account watch climb understanding must wait government nod themselves threat cross present look include persuade until environmental contribute number bind chance sort tree severe sufficient bring cell internal scene mother in anyone generally company form benefit farm advice explore appeal leader desire vision draw negotiation book environment region he parent collect district photograph rest attract capital walk compare anyway otherwise detail other tend convention dark again metal target modern cause have complex partly distance selection engineering

hotelbuchung griechenland of 7:21PM May 01, 2010

I dont care what Canada is doing, The insurance company's are running health care competition free and have people like you that can't stand the idea of something else entering the market. We have the greatest Military in the World, I don't see Av-Med or Blue Cross on those F-16's or Air Craft Carriers. Medicare had all the worst cost dumped on it by insurance companys in 1965. Take a big guess why Repubs wanted Social Security in 1935. Get your facts straight next time. Reform is what was needed, now we can start justifiying some of the high cost that have been flying around for 50 years.

John of FL 4:30PM March 28, 2010

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