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Healthcare Financial News - Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Healthcare Financial News


Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Growing Number of Americans Report Problems Related to Healthcare Bills

With two weeks remaining until Election Day, more people are reporting problems with healthcare bills, and paying for health care retains a solid hold on the public’s list of their top economic concerns, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s final election 2008 tracking poll.

About one in three Americans now report their family has had problems paying medical bills in the past year, up from about a quarter saying the same two years ago. Almost one in five (18%) of Americans report household problems with medical bills amounting to more than $1,000 in the past year.

Nearly half (47%) of the public reports someone in their family skipping pills or cutting back on medical care they said they needed in the past year due to the cost of care. “Health care is now every bit as much an economic issue for the American people as job insecurity, mortgage payments and credit card debt,” said Kaiser President and CEO Drew Altman.

posted on 10/22/2008 7:44:29 AM (CST)  Permalink   
Extra Payments to Private Fee-For-Service Medicare Advantage Plans to Total $2.5 Billion in 2008

Private fee-for-service (PFFS) Medicare Advantage plans will be paid an average 16.6 percent more in 2008 compared to what the same enrollees would have cost in the traditional Medicare fee-for-service program, according to a new report from The Commonwealth Fund. Although Congress made significant revisions to policies that affect how PFFS plans operate in 2011 and thereafter, the legislation is expected to slow enrollment in PFFS plans but not stop the overpayment for each enrollee.

In the new report, Brian Biles, professor of health policy at George Washington University, and colleagues estimate that extra payments to PFFS plans will amount to $1,248 per beneficiary over traditional Medicare costs for each of about 2 million Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in PFFS plans, for a total of more than $2.5 billion in 2008.

"The legislation passed this year does not adequately address the overpayment problem in private fee-for-service Medicare Advantage plans," said Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis. "While new requirements will eliminate some of the higher payments to plans and strengthen reporting requirements, we need to determine whether these plans are the best use of limited Medicare dollars."

 

posted on 10/22/2008 7:42:23 AM (CST)  Permalink