The
Specifics: How Obama Plans To Cut Health
Programs By $320 Billion, Seniors
Targeted
(Compiled from Materials from Kaiser Health
Report)September 22, 2011--In
his plan to trim the federal deficit,
President Barack Obama Monday proposed $320
billion in cuts to Medicare and Medicaid,
largely by changing how the federal
government pays health providers, slashing
payments to drug companies, and dramatically
changing the way it splits the costs of
Medicaid with the states, according to a
fact sheet the White House released.
Many stakeholder groups representing
seniors, drug companies and health providers
denounced the plan.
AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond
said she opposes any plan to make Medicare
beneficiaries pay more for health care.
"AARP reiterates its strong opposition to
any proposals that would raise costs or cut
the hard earned Medicare benefits that
millions of seniors depend upon every day
for their health and retirement security,"
she said. AARP did credit the president for
not cutting Social Security.
The administration also is proposing cutting
$3.5 billion from a fund created by the
health law to
improve disease prevention and to promote
public health while keeping $13.8 billion.
Some Medicare beneficiaries would see costs
go up under the president’s plan. For the
first time, beneficiaries receiving home
health services would pay a $100 co-payment
per treatment episode starting in 2017,
which would raise $400 million over 10
years.
Read a White House fact sheet on President
Obama's plan to cut the deficit:
The deductible Medicare Part B (physician
costs) would increase by $25 in 2017, 2019
and 2021 for new beneficiaries, raising $1
billion over the next decade.
Starting in 2017, new beneficiaries who buy
a Medigap policy that leaves them with
little out-of-pocket costs would pay a 15
percent surcharge on that policy. Critics
have argued such Medigap plans lead to
excess use of health services and raise
health spending. The change would net the
feds $2.5 billion over 10 years.
Higher income Medicare beneficiaries would
pay higher premiums for Medicare Part B and
Medicare prescription drug plans, raising
$20 billion over 10 years.
One of the biggest changes proposed by Obama
is how the federal government splits
Medicaid spending with states, at a proposed
savings of $14.9 billion over 10 years.
Currently, states and the federal government
share the cost of Medicaid, with the federal
government paying about two-thirds and the
states one-third of the total. The
percentage varies by state based on the
wealth of each state, with poorer states
getting a higher match rate. The state match
rate also varies for both Medicaid and the
Children’s Health Insurance Program, which
covers children from low-income households.
Obama is proposing that beginning in 2017,
the matching rates from the two programs
would be blended to a single rate, but from
2014 through 2016, states with a higher
enrollment would get a higher federal match
rate. The idea is to give states incentives
to enroll more people starting in 2014 when
the health overhaul law expands Medicaid. An
additional 16 million people will be
eligible for Medicaid starting in 2014. The
federal government will still pay all the
costs for the expansion of Medicaid coverage
from 2014 through 2016, as promised in the
health law.
Among the hardest hit providers in the Obama
plan would be so-called post-acute health
providers— nursing homes, long-term care
hospitals, rehabilitation facilities and
home health facilities—which would see $42
billion in cuts over 10 years.
Obama administration officials said its
deficit reduction plan would extend the life
of the Medicare Trust Fund from 2024 to
2027. The trust fund covers only Medicare
Part A, the hospital costs portion of the
program.
Matt Salo, executive director of the
National Association of State Medicaid
Directors, said simplifying the federal
Medicaid rate is a good idea, "but not in
the context of deficit reduction because it
can mean only one thing: cost shifts to
states who simply cannot shoulder any more
burden in this area."
Even Families USA, the consumer advocacy
group that's been a consistently strong
supporter of Obama’s health care platform,
was critical of the deficit plan.
"The cuts to the Medicaid program in the
president's proposal – which shifts the
burden to states and ultimately onto the
shoulders of seniors, people with
disabilities, and low-income families who
depend on the program as their lifeline –
would be harmful," said Ron Pollack,
executive director of Families USA.
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America Senior Vice President Matt Bennett
lashed out at the Obama administration
proposal for adding what it calls "price
controls" to the Medicare prescription drug
plan, or Medicare Part D.
"PhRMA opposes implementing Medicaid's
failed price controls in Medicare Part D,"
he said. "Such policies would fundamentally
alter the competitive nature of the program,
undermine its success and potentially cost
hundreds of thousands of American jobs."
Dr. Georges C. Benjamin, executive director
of the American Public Health Association,
criticized the administration’s decision to
cut funding to prevention and public health,
saying "it could effectively put the
nation's health at risk, severely
threatening ongoing efforts to reduce the
burden of our nation’s most feared and
deadly diseases…Long-term and potentially
life-threatening consequences of a
compromised public health system will far
outweigh the short-term savings."
The American Hospital Association also
blasted the Obama proposal to cut Medicaid
and Medicare provider rates, saying they
would lead to 200,000 job cuts to hospitals
and businesses they support by 2012. "This
is the wrong prescription to create a
healthier America and sustain job growth in
a sector of the economy that is actually
adding jobs," said Rich Umbdenstock,
president and CEO of the American Hospital
Association.
The only major health provider group not to
criticize the plan was the American Medical
Association. The doctors' group was pleased
the administration’s proposal included the
$300 billion needed to fix the flawed
Medicare payment formula that threatens to
slash fees to doctors each year. Since 2003,
Congress has repeatedly stepped in at the
last minute to avert the cuts from taking
effect.
"Honest accounting of our nation's debt
should not assume $300 billion in Medicare
physician cuts, which Congress has rejected
repeatedly because of the significant,
detrimental impact those cuts would have on
patients' access to care," said Dr. Peter W.
Carmel, president of the AMA.
The biggest cut to Medicare requires
pharmaceutical companies to lower their
rates. The proposal would save Medicare an
estimated $135 billion over 10 years
starting in 2013. The change would allow the
federal government to receive the same brand
name and generic rebates for low-income
Medicare patients as are provided to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
The cuts to the major health entitlement
programs are part of a White House plan to
reduce the federal deficit by more than $3
trillion over the next 10 years. The plan is
the administration’s opening move in
negotiations on deficit reduction to be
taken up by the joint House-Senate "super
committee." If a deal is not enacted by Dec.
23, cuts could take effect automatically
across government agencies.
Watch excerpts from President Obama's
speech about his federal deficit reduction
plan.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell
said in a statement Monday: "A massive tax
hike, phantom savings, and punting on
entitlement reform is not a recipe for
economic or job growth-or even meaningful
deficit reduction."