New Medicare Law Threatens Access
to Services
January 12, 2004—The Medicare law recently signed by the President
(The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003,
Public Law 108-173) may pose problems for seniors and individuals with disabilities
who qualify for Medicare through the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)
program. Medicare is the primary health coverage for some five million non-elderly
adults who receive SSDI—more than one fourth disabled by a mental illness.
Many Face More Limited Drug Coverage
The new law encourages Medicare privatization by offering significant financial
incentives for private plans to participate. Analysts fear that these incentives
could undermine the traditional Medicare program while providing little in
the way of meaningful drug benefits.
The law creates a new drug benefit with a $35 monthly premium and $250 annual
deductible. Although low-income Medicare recipients will not have to pay either,
all who enroll in this benefit still must pay 25% of drug costs (Medicare pays
the rest) until they have paid $2,250 during the year. Once they have paid
$2,250, federal coverage stops until a beneficiary's out-of-pocket expense
reaches $3,600 that year. Then the beneficiary pays only 5% and Medicare pays
the rest.
This gap in coverage (called by some a “doughnut hole”) does not
apply to beneficiaries with income below 150% of the federal poverty level.
For more information on how much consumers will pay, see Families
USA's chart.
The law also prevents Medicare recipients from purchasing additional drug
coverage through MediGap plans, which many now use. It also encourages shifting
of beneficiaries
into health maintenance organizations (HMOs), which may offer less or less
stable coverage.
Although the law does not take effect until 2006, beginning in June 2004 a
discount card will be available, enabling any Medicare recipient to save up
to 25% on prescriptions. An annual enrollment fee up to $30 may be required.
The government will pay this fee for certain low-income recipients, who will
also be eligible for a subsidy of up to $600.
Some Medicaid Recipients May Face
New Limits
Under the new law, people who receive both Medicare and Medicaid (dual eligibles)
would get all their prescription drugs through the new Medicare drug benefit.
They may have more limited access to medications than they have had through
Medicaid, because the new benefit allows formularies that cover only a limited
number of medications in a class of drugs. Medicaid coverage is generally more
comprehensive.
Dually eligible recipients will, however, get a Medicare-premium subsidy and
be protected from the high cost-sharing and deductibles that other Medicare
beneficiaries will face.
Many questions remain about how the law will actually affect low-income beneficiaries
and individuals with disabilities. Analysts fear that recipients will now face
high out-of-pocket costs and that the law's lack of cost-containment measures
may stretch an already tight federal budget.
More information is available in a December 8 article by the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities, “The Troubling Medicare Legislation.”
Health Savings Accounts Are Problematic
The new Medicare law also includes an unrelated provision for “health
savings accounts”—tax-advantaged accounts that can help people
with high-deductible, catastrophic health insurance pay out-of-pocket medical
expenses. Money set aside in these accounts is tax-free if used for medical
expenses. This could have a profound effect on employer-based coverage by steering
financially able and healthier individuals out of traditional insurance plans.
Those left in the plans would then likely face steep premium increases or be
left without coverage.
Mental Health Coverage Is Discriminatory
The new law also ignores needed changes to update Medicare’s mental
health benefit. Currently, it is easier to use Medicare to pay for institutional
services than to pay for outpatient and rehabilitative services. Medicare also
unfairly requires a 50% co-payment for treatment of mental disorders, rather
than the 20% co-payment required for other outpatient services.
Legislative Fixes Proposed
Medicare Amendments Introduced
- Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA) introduced legislation (S.
1992) prior to
Congress' adjournment that would make sweeping changes to the new Medicare
law, including repeal of the health savings accounts provision and the restriction
on MediGap coverage of prescription drugs.
Improvement of Mental Health Coverage
Bills to improve mental health coverage are before both the House and the
Senate.
- The Medicare Mental Health
Modernization Act of 2003 (S. 646, H.R. 1340)
would provide comprehensive changes to the mental health benefit in Medicare.
Senator Jon Corzine (D-NJ) and Representative Pete Stark (D-CA) introduced
the legislation.
- Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) and Representative Ted Strickland (D-OH)
are sponsoring legislation that would provide parity in the mental health
outpatient
co-payment with co-payment for other outpatient services (Medicare
Mental Health Co-Payment Equity Act, S. 853, H.R. 2787).
What You Can Do
Lawmakers need to hear from you! Contact your Senators and Representative
and urge them to:
- Co-sponsor S. 1992 to repeal many of the most harmful elements of the
new Medicare law, including restrictions on MediGap coverage and provisions
that
could lead to premium increases for people with employer-based insurance
coverage.
- Support The Medicare Mental Health Modernization Act of 2003 and The
Medicare Mental Health Co-Payment Equity Act to end discriminatory co-payment
requirements
and reduce Medicare's bias toward institutional services over outpatient
and rehabilitative services.
Contacting Lawmakers
- Phone: Call your Senators and Representative via the Capitol switchboard
at 202-224-3121.
- Write a letter to: The Honorable (first and last name) U.S. House of Representatives,
Washington DC 20515 OR U.S. Senate, Washington DC 20510
- Email: Send a clear, concise message to
your member of Congress via www.congress.org.
Most congressional offices will not respond to email from people outside
of their districts, so make sure you
introduce
yourself
as a constituent. Remember to include your full name, mailing address and
zip code.
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