麻豆女优

Skip to content

Medicare For All? CMS Chief Warns Program Has Enough Problems Already

Progressive Democrats of America holds a news conference to announce the launch of a Medicare for All Caucus at the Capitol on July 19. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call via Getty Images)

The Trump administration鈥檚 top Medicare official Tuesday slammed the federal health program as riddled with problems that hinder care to beneficiaries, increase costs for taxpayers and escalate fraud and abuse.

Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), said those troubles underscore why she opposes calls by many Democrats for dramatically widening eligibility for Medicare, now serving 60 million seniors and people with disabilities, to tens of millions other people.

鈥淲e only have to look at some of Medicare鈥檚 major problems to know it鈥檚 a bad idea,鈥 Verma at a meeting in Washington.

CMS lacks the authority from Congress to operate the program effectively, Verma said, which means it often pays higher-than-necessary rates to doctors and hospitals and can鈥檛 take steps used by private insurers to control costs.

鈥淲e face tremendous barriers to supporting and bringing innovation to Medicare, and it literally takes an act of Congress to add new types of benefits for the Medicare population,鈥 she added.

Since Medicare was approved in 1965, Congress has held power over eligibility and benefits 鈥 largely to control spending. That has meant efforts to expand services can get weighed down by partisan politics and swayed by lobbying groups, which significantly delay changes. One example: Congress didn鈥檛 add a pharmaceutical benefit to Medicare until 2003 鈥 decades after drugs became a mainstay in most treatments.

Advocates for seniors have called for adding vision and dental benefits for many years, but the proposals have gotten little traction because of cost concerns.

Another problem, according to Verma, is that her agency reviews less than 0.2 percent of the more than 1 billion claims that Medicare receives from providers. 鈥淭hat is ridiculously low,鈥 she said.

Verma also lamented the traditional Medicare program’s limited ability to require doctors and hospitals to get prior authorization from the federal government before performing certain procedures. That process 鈥 which has been routine for decades in the private sector 鈥 can lead to higher improper payments to doctors and more fraud and abuse, she said.

Jonathan Oberlander, a professor in the department of health policy and management at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, agreed with Verma that 鈥淢edicare is not always nimble, particularly in adjusting benefits,鈥 and officials have long complained that Congress micromanages the program. Still, he added, 鈥渨ith a program as large and important to Americans as Medicare, it is perfectly appropriate for Congress to weigh in on the addition of new benefits, especially since taxpayers will bear the costs of those changes.鈥

Verma for months has spoken out against the 鈥淢edicare-for-all鈥 proposals pushed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and a growing chorus of Democrats. But her 35-minute address to the meeting of the trade group America鈥檚 Health Insurance Plans marked the first time she listed the litany of problems with Medicare, which she has run since March 2017.

Proponents of 鈥淢edicare-for-all鈥 are reacting to problems caused by the Affordable Care Act, she said, and should know expanding Medicare will worsen the program鈥檚 existing challenges of controlling costs and improving care.

鈥淏ut their solution is literally to do more of what鈥檚 not working,鈥 she added. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like the man who has a pounding headache, who then takes a hammer to his head to make it go away.鈥

Verma鈥檚 comments, however, overlooked the key leadership role that Medicare plays in the health sector, which is often emulated by private insurers, Oberlander said.

鈥淚n payment reform, Medicare has a record of being a leader and innovator,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or all of their supposed advantages, private insurers pay much higher prices than Medicare does for medical services. Verma ignores the fact that Medicare鈥檚 price regulation has produced substantial savings.鈥

Although Verma heavily criticized the traditional Medicare program, which covers two-thirds of enrollees, she boasted about how she and the Trump administration were running Medicare Advantage, the fast-growing alternative program that is operated by private insurers such as UnitedHealthcare and Humana.

More than 20 million Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in these plans, which often cost members less than traditional Medicare and have additional benefits. But they generally require members to use only the plan鈥檚 network of providers.

鈥淢edicare Advantage represents value for our beneficiaries and taxpayers,鈥 Verma said.

She touted a 2019 CMS initiative that will for the first time allow the Advantage plans to offer supplemental health benefits that go beyond traditional dental and health services. These include adult day care, in home support services and meals.

It is 鈥渙ne of the most significant changes made to the Medicare program鈥 and 鈥渨ill have a major impact鈥 on improving health for plan members, she said.

But the private plans have taken a cautious approach to adding those benefits.

About 鈥 or fewer than 10 percent of the total 鈥 agreed to offer these services next year.

At the AHIP conference on Monday, health insurance executives said they were still trying to figure out which of their members would most likely benefit from the new offerings.

鈥淲e are operating in a vacuum of good evidence,鈥 said William Shrank, chief medical officer of UPMC Health Plan in Pittsburgh. Nonetheless, Shrank said the opportunity to offer new benefits going beyond just health care could help beneficiaries stay out of the hospital and lead healthier lives.

Verma did not mention a by the Department of Health and Human Services鈥 inspector general that found many Advantage plans were improperly denying claims from patients and doctors.

Administration critics were quick to note that omission.

鈥淗er intemperate attack on traditional Medicare 鈥 on which two-thirds of all beneficiaries rely and which millions value so highly鈥 鈥 is 鈥渟triking,鈥 said Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University. As is 鈥渉er utter failure to acknowledge the serious challenges in making Medicare Advantage operate fairly, which her own inspector general underscored.鈥

Related Topics

Insurance Medicare The Health Law