Judging by more than 16,400 comments recently posted on a federal government website, you鈥檇 think there was a groundswell of older Americans demanding that federal officials hike payments to their Medicare Advantage health insurance plans.
Yet about 82% of the comments are identical to a letter that appeared on the website of a secretive advocacy group called Medicare Advantage Majority, a data analysis by 麻豆女优 Health News has found.
The 鈥溾 group does not reveal its funders or much else 鈥 other than to say it is 鈥渄edicated to protecting and strengthening Medicare Advantage鈥 and is 鈥減owered by hundreds of thousands of local advocates nationwide.鈥
鈥淥ur campaign provides information and offers tools for concerned Americans to use to reach decision makers,鈥 spokesperson Darren Grubb said in an email. The group has spent more than $3.1 million on hundreds of Facebook ads since September 2024, according to , a database of the social media company鈥檚 online ads.
There鈥檚 no doubt health insurers are unhappy with a from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, to keep Medicare Advantage reimbursement rates essentially flat in 2027 鈥 far less than they expected from the Trump administration.
Medicare Advantage plans differ from traditional Medicare because private insurance companies administer them. The insurance plans enroll about members, more than half the people eligible for Medicare. The plans offer things like vision and drug coverage, but Medicare Advantage insurers restrict the hospitals and doctors that patients can use and require prior approval for various procedures.
CMS is set to announce a final decision by early next month on the rate proposal. The agency solicited on the proposal from Jan. 26 through Feb. 25 to give interested parties and the public a chance to air their views.
Medicare Advantage Majority, which says the rate proposal amounts to a 鈥渃ut鈥 in services and warns of dire consequences for seniors should it go through, accounted for at least 13,522 of the 16,422 comments published as of March 12.
The proposed rate plan 鈥減uts my access to care at risk,鈥 the group鈥檚 template letter to policymakers reads in part. 鈥淚f the investment made by Washington in the Medicare Advantage program is nearly flat year-over-year, I could lose benefits I rely on every day, including affordable prescriptions, capped out of pocket costs, and access to trusted doctors and specialists.鈥
鈥淢edicare Advantage is not optional for me. The cost protections alone have saved me thousands of dollars and made my health care manageable. Without this program, I would face higher costs, fewer providers, and fewer benefits at a time when I can least afford it,鈥 the letter states.
Critics warn that these sorts of campaigns may create a misleading impression of grassroots support, especially when it鈥檚 not clear who is financing them.
鈥淚t puts a different spin on a massive groundswell of comments to know all are being driven by one specific organization,鈥 said Michael Beckel, director of money in politics reform for Issue One, a group that seeks to limit the influence of money on government policy and legislation.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no way for the public to know what wealthy donors or special interests are funding dark money groups like this,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat means there鈥檚 no scrutiny of who鈥檚 really calling the shots.鈥
Some health care policy experts, who have long argued that the government overpays Medicare Advantage plans by tens of billions of dollars every year, believe industry groups or their surrogates routinely overstate possible negative impacts of rate decisions they don鈥檛 like.
鈥淭he plans always say that the sky is falling,鈥 said Matthew Fiedler, a health care policy expert with the Brookings Institution. 鈥淭he industry has a lot of money at stake here. They try to exert pressure on policymakers any way they can.鈥
At the same time, even critics concede that some of the millions of people enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans could face service cuts if insurance companies are not satisfied with government payments.
鈥淚t is legitimate for people to be worried,鈥 said Julie Carter, counsel for federal policy at the Medicare Rights Center, a group that advocates for older adults and people with disabilities.
Her group argues that Medicare Advantage plans have never attained expected cost savings and instead have been overpaid for years at least partly due to 鈥渁ctions to maximize profits.鈥 She said the health plans 鈥渁re supposed to be saving money, not taking extra.鈥
People struggling to pay health care bills may have little use for the policy debate in Washington.
鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for being able to have this program, I really wouldn鈥檛 be able to afford any kind of medical services, to be honest,鈥 said EsterAlicia Rose, 75, who works at the front desk of a hotel in Pagosa Springs, Colorado. She said she signed the Medicare Advantage Majority form letter to reach policymakers.
Kathy Lovely-Marshall, 66, a retired nurse who lives in Brookville, Ohio, did too. She said she receives 鈥渁 lot of perks鈥 from her plan, such as dental care, eyeglasses, and prescriptions.
鈥淎ll those things are a big plus as far as I am concerned,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 very happy with the plan I have.鈥
But Corenia Branham, 90, a widow and cancer survivor who lives in Alum Creek, West Virginia, said she wants nothing to do with Medicare Advantage plans run by private health insurance companies. She said she didn鈥檛 turn in any of the four form letters under her name, which were posted online by CMS on Feb. 23 and signed, 鈥淢iss Corenia Branham Branham.鈥 It鈥檚 not clear why her last name is signed twice.
Branham said she鈥檚 not on Medicare Advantage and doubts she could count on it for needed care.
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 recommend it to nobody,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 sure don鈥檛 want anything to do with it.鈥
Grubb, the Medicare Advantage Majority spokesperson, disputed that account. He said Branham responded to an ad on Facebook. On Feb. 6, she 鈥渃ompleted the form with her information and chose to send her comment to CMS as well as to her representatives in Congress and the White House,鈥 he said.
Other Medicare Advantage advocacy groups have stepped up ad campaigns as the rate decision looms.
The Better Medicare Alliance, whose 鈥渁llies鈥 include a range of health insurers, health care providers, and consumers, is urging seniors to 鈥淭ell Washington to Stand Up for Medicare Advantage.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檝e mobilized beneficiaries to write letters and make phone calls, and we鈥檝e run digital ads on streaming platforms,鈥 spokesperson Susan Reilly said.
Reilly said that this year roughly 3 million seniors 鈥渨ere forced to find new coverage鈥 because plans either shuttered operations or left some areas.
She also said Medicare Advantage plans have 鈥渟caled back鈥 benefits such as offering transportation to medical appointments, nutrition support, and dental and vision coverage, while over the past two years beneficiaries have faced an average $900 increase in out-of-pocket maximums.
鈥淲e do view this as especially serious,鈥 Reilly said. 鈥淭his isn't a single bad year; it's the cumulative effect of years of underfunding and policy disruption from the previous administration that has left the program increasingly vulnerable.鈥
As of March 12, CMS said it had received 46,884 comments but had posted only 16,422 online.
CMS spokesperson Catherine Howden said the agency would make more comments public 鈥渁s soon as practicable.鈥
鈥淭he agency focuses on reviewing the substance of timely submissions and does not speculate on volume, sentiment, or potential impact of comments while the comment period is open/under review,鈥 she said in a statement.
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