Medicare+Choice
enrollees face continued
cost increases in 2003; Costs doubled in 4
Years;
Medicare PPO out-of-pocket costs even higher
NEW YORK, Aug. 11, 2003-- Providing
evidence of eroding benefits in the Medicare+Choice managed care
program, a new Commonwealth Fund report finds that enrollees' average
annual plan premiums and other out-of-pocket costs rose ten percent in
2003 to $1,964, more than double what they were in 1999.
The report, Average Out-of-Pocket
Health Care Costs for Medicare+Choice Enrollees Increase Ten Percent in
2003, also reveals that out-of-pocket spending for enrollees in Medicare
PPO (preferred provider organization) demonstration plans is nearly 50
percent higher, on average, than costs for Medicare+Choice enrollees.
Average out-of-pocket spending by PPO enrollees is also higher than that
experienced by the average beneficiary in traditional Medicare-raising
questions about whether these plans can offer a lower-priced alternative
for Medicare beneficiaries, according to authors Marsha Gold and Lori
Achman of Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Gold and Achman estimate that
enrollees in PPO demonstration plans, which were implemented by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in 2003 to give
Medicare+Choice enrollees more plan options, will spend $2,884
out-of-pocket in 2003. That is substantially higher than the $1,964 in
average annual costs for those in Medicare+Choice plans. These cost
estimates are potentially understated because they assume that all care
is received through in-network providers, according to the report.
Costs for enrollees in Medicare+Choice
have continued to trend upward since 1999, the first year Gold and
Achman analyzed beneficiary spending in the Medicare+Choice program. In
2003, enrollees will pay an average of $1,964 in out-of-pocket expenses
for health care-twice as high as in 1999, when costs averaged $976.
"As Congress debates the role of private plans in the future of the
Medicare program, it should consider the eroding financial protection
experienced under Medicare+Choice," said Gold.
Sicker Medicare+Choice enrollees face
even higher cost burdens. Those in poor health will spend about three
times more out-of-pocket than those in good health. Costs for sicker
plan enrollees also increased at a faster rate over the four-year period
than did costs for healthy enrollees. From 1999 to 2003, average
out-of-pocket costs for beneficiaries in poor health climbed from $2,211
to $5,305. Annual costs for those in good health rose from $836 to
$1,564.
"Health insurance is designed to
protect individuals from high health care costs that could inflict
financial hardship," said Karen Davis, president of The
Commonwealth Fund. "The steadily increasing financial burden on
sicker beneficiaries is of notable concern."
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Average Annual Out-of-Pocket
Cost-Sharing for Medicare+Choice Enrollees, 1999-2003